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HB1515 • 2025

Relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the Windham School District.

Relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the Windham School District.

Education Healthcare
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Canales
Last action
2025-05-09
Official status
05/09/2025 H Committee report sent to Calendars
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the Windham School District.

Relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the Windham School District.

What This Bill Does

  • Relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the Windham School District.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2025-05-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee report sent to Calendars

  2. 2025-05-08 Texas Legislature Online

    Comte report filed with Committee Coordinator

  3. 2025-05-08 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee report distributed

  4. 2025-04-30 Texas Legislature Online

    Considered in public hearing

  5. 2025-04-30 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee substitute considered in committee

  6. 2025-04-30 Texas Legislature Online

    Reported favorably as substituted

  7. 2025-04-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Scheduled for public hearing on . . .

  8. 2025-04-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Considered in public hearing

  9. 2025-04-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Testimony taken/registration(s) recorded in committee

  10. 2025-04-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Left pending in committee

  11. 2025-03-14 Texas Legislature Online

    Filed

  12. 2025-03-14 Texas Legislature Online

    Read first time

  13. 2025-03-14 Texas Legislature Online

    Referred to Corrections

Official Summary Text

Relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the Windham School District.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
89(R) HB 1515 - House Committee Report version - Bill Text

89R26998 BCH-D

By: Canales

H.B. No. 1515

Substitute the following for H.B. No. 1515:

By: Harless

C.S.H.B. No. 1515

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED

AN ACT

relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of

Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and

to the functions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the

Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, the Texas Correctional

Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments, and the

Windham School District.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:

SECTION 1. Article 2A.001, Code of Criminal Procedure, is

amended to read as follows:

Art. 2A.001. PEACE OFFICERS GENERALLY. The following are

peace officers:

(1) a sheriff, a sheriff's deputy, or a reserve deputy

sheriff who holds a permanent peace officer license issued under

Chapter 1701, Occupations Code;

(2) a constable, a deputy constable, or a reserve

deputy constable who holds a permanent peace officer license issued

under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code;

(3) a marshal or police officer of a municipality or a

reserve municipal police officer who holds a permanent peace

officer license issued under Chapter 1701, Occupations Code;

(4) a ranger, officer, or member of the reserve

officer corps commissioned by the Public Safety Commission and the

director of the Department of Public Safety;

(5) an investigator of a district attorney's, criminal

district attorney's, or county attorney's office;

(6) a law enforcement agent of the Texas Alcoholic

Beverage Commission;

(7) a member of an arson investigating unit

commissioned by a municipality, a county, or the state;

(8) an officer commissioned under Section 37.081,

Education Code, or Subchapter E, Chapter 51, Education Code;

(9) an officer commissioned by the Texas Facilities

Commission;

(10) a law enforcement officer commissioned by the

Parks and Wildlife Commission;

(11) an officer commissioned under Chapter 23,

Transportation Code;

(12) a municipal park and recreational patrol officer

or security officer;

(13) a security officer or investigator commissioned

as a peace officer by the comptroller;

(14) an officer commissioned by a water control and

improvement district under Section 49.216, Water Code;

(15) an officer commissioned by a board of trustees

under Chapter 54, Transportation Code;

(16) an investigator commissioned by the Texas Medical

Board;

(17) an officer commissioned by:

(A) the board of managers of the Dallas County

Hospital District, the Tarrant County Hospital District, the Bexar

County Hospital District, or the El Paso County Hospital District

under Section 281.057, Health and Safety Code;

(B) the board of directors of the Ector County

Hospital District under Section 1024.117, Special District Local

Laws Code;

(C) the board of directors of the Midland County

Hospital District of Midland County, Texas, under Section 1061.121,

Special District Local Laws Code; or

(D) the board of hospital managers of the Lubbock

County Hospital District of Lubbock County, Texas, under Section

1053.113, Special District Local Laws Code;

(18) a county park ranger commissioned under

Subchapter E, Chapter 351, Local Government Code;

(19) an investigator employed by the Texas Racing

Commission;

(20) an officer commissioned under Chapter 554,

Occupations Code;

(21) an officer commissioned by the governing body of

a metropolitan rapid transit authority under Section 451.108,

Transportation Code, or a regional transportation authority under

Section 452.110, Transportation Code;

(22) an investigator commissioned by the attorney

general under Section 402.009, Government Code;

(23) a security officer or investigator commissioned

as a peace officer under Chapter 466, Government Code;

(24) an officer appointed by an appellate court under

Subchapter F, Chapter 53, Government Code;

(25) an officer commissioned by the state fire marshal

under Chapter 417, Government Code;

(26) an investigator commissioned by the commissioner

of insurance under Section 701.104, Insurance Code;

(27) an apprehension specialist or inspector general

commissioned by the Texas Juvenile Justice Department as an officer

under Section 242.102 or 243.052, Human Resources Code;

(28) an officer
commissioned
[
appointed
] by the

inspector general [
of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice
]

under Section 493.019, Government Code;

(29) an investigator commissioned by the Texas

Commission on Law Enforcement under Section 1701.160, Occupations

Code;

(30) a fire marshal or any related officer, inspector,

or investigator commissioned by a county under Subchapter B,

Chapter 352, Local Government Code;

(31) a fire marshal or any officer, inspector, or

investigator commissioned by an emergency services district under

Chapter 775, Health and Safety Code;

(32) an officer commissioned by the State Board of

Dental Examiners under Section 254.013, Occupations Code, subject

to the limitations imposed by that section; and

(33) an investigator commissioned by the Texas

Juvenile Justice Department as an officer under Section 221.011,

Human Resources Code.

SECTION 2. Article 66.351, Code of Criminal Procedure, is

amended to read as follows:

Art. 66.351. BIENNIAL PLANS. The Department of Public

Safety and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, with advice

from [
the council and
] the Department of Information Resources,

shall develop biennial plans to:

(1) improve the reporting and accuracy of the criminal

justice information system; and

(2) develop and maintain monitoring systems capable of

identifying missing information.

SECTION 3. Articles 66.352(a), (c), (d), (e), and (f), Code

of Criminal Procedure, are amended to read as follows:

(a) At least once during each five-year period, the
state

auditor
[
council
] shall
conduct
[
coordinate
] an examination of the

records and operations of the criminal justice information system

to ensure:

(1) the accuracy and completeness of information in

the system; and

(2) the promptness of information reporting.

(c) The [
council, the
] Department of Public Safety[
,
] and

the Texas Department of Criminal Justice may examine the records of

the agencies required to report information to the Department of

Public Safety or the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

(d) The
state auditor
[
examining entity under Subsection

(b)
] shall submit to the legislature and the
governor
[
council
] a

report that summarizes the findings of each examination and

contains recommendations for improving the criminal justice

information system.

(e) Not later than the first anniversary of the date the

state auditor
[
examining entity under Subsection (b)
] submits a

report under Subsection (d), the Department of Public Safety shall

report to the Legislative Budget Board
and
[
,
] the governor[
, and

the council
] the department's progress in implementing the
state

auditor's
[
examining entity's
] recommendations, including the

reason for not implementing any recommendation.

(f) Each year following the submission of the report

described by Subsection (e), the Department of Public Safety shall

submit a similar report until each of the
state auditor's

[
examining entity's
] recommendations is implemented.

SECTION 4. Section 19.003, Education Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 19.003. GOALS OF THE DISTRICT. The goals of the

district in educating its students are to:

(1) reduce recidivism;

(2) reduce the cost of confinement or imprisonment;

(3) increase the success of former
students
[
inmates
]

in obtaining and maintaining employment; and

(4) provide an incentive to
students
[
inmates
] to

behave in positive ways during confinement or imprisonment.

SECTION 5. Section 19.004(c), Education Code, is amended to

read as follows:

(c) The district shall:

(1) develop educational programs specifically

designed for persons eligible under Section 19.005 and ensure that

those programs, such as
a high school equivalency program
[
GED
] and

an English as a second language program
[
ESL
], are integrated with

an applied
career and technical
[
vocational
] context leading to

employment;

(2)
[
(1-a)
] develop
career and technical education

[
vocational training
] programs specifically designed for persons

eligible under Section 19.005 and prioritize the programs that

result in certification or licensure, considering the impact that a

previous felony conviction has on the ability to secure

certification, licensure, and employment;

(3)
[
(1-b)
] continually assess job markets in this

state and update, augment, and expand the
career and technical

education
[
vocational training
] programs developed under

Subdivision
(2)
[
(1-a)
] as necessary to provide relevant and

marketable skills to students; and

(4)
[
(2)
] coordinate educational programs and

services in the department with those provided by other state

agencies, by political subdivisions, and by persons who provide

programs and services under contract.

SECTION 6. Section 19.0041(a), Education Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(a) To evaluate the effectiveness of its programs, the

Windham School District shall compile and analyze information for

each of its programs, including performance-based information and

data related to academic,
career and technical education

[
vocational training
], [
and
] life skills
, and postsecondary

education
programs. This information shall
be disaggregated by sex

and
include for each person who participates in district programs

an evaluation of:

(1) institutional disciplinary violations;

(2) subsequent arrests;

(3) subsequent convictions or confinements;

(4) the cost of confinement;

(5) educational achievement;

(6) high school equivalency examination passage;

(7) the kind of training services provided;

(8) the kind of employment the person obtains on

release;

(9) whether the employment was related to training;

(10) the difference between the amount of the person's

earnings on the date employment is obtained following release and

the amount of those earnings on the first anniversary of that date;

[
and
]

(11) the retention factors associated with the

employment
; and

(12)

the number and percentage of students who

completed training in a regulated industry who applied for and were

issued or denied a certificate or license by a state agency
.

SECTION 7. Section 19.0042, Education Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 19.0042. INFORMATION TO BE PROVIDED BY DISTRICT BEFORE

CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION
[
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
] PROGRAM

ENROLLMENT. Before a person described by Section 19.005 enrolls in

a district
career and technical education
[
vocational training
]

program, the district must inform the person in writing of:

(1) any rule or policy of a state agency that would

impose a restriction or prohibition on the person in obtaining a

certificate or license in connection with the
career and technical

education
[
vocational training
] program;

(2) the total number of district students released

during the preceding 10 years who have completed a district
career

and technical education
[
vocational training
] program that allows

for an opportunity to apply for a certificate or license from a

state agency and, of those students:

(A) the number who have applied for a certificate

or license from a state agency;

(B) the number who have been issued a certificate

or license by a state agency; and

(C) the number who have been denied a certificate

or license by a state agency; and

(3) the procedures for:

(A) requesting a criminal history evaluation

letter under Section 53.102, Occupations Code;

(B) providing evidence of fitness to perform the

duties and discharge the responsibilities of a licensed occupation

for purposes of Section 53.023, Occupations Code; and

(C) appealing a state agency's denial of a

certificate or license, including deadlines and due process

requirements:

(i) to the State Office of Administrative

Hearings under Subchapter C, Chapter 2001, Government Code; and

(ii) through any other available avenue.

SECTION 8. Section 19.010(a), Education Code, is amended to

read as follows:

(a) The district shall propose, and the board shall adopt

with any modification the board finds necessary, a strategic plan

that includes:

(1) a mission statement relating to the goals and

duties of the district under this chapter;

(2) goals to be met by the district in carrying out the

mission stated; and

(3) specific educational,
career and technical

education
[
vocational training
], and counseling programs to be

conducted by the district to meet the goals stated in the plan.

SECTION 9. Section 19.011, Education Code, is amended by

amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsection (c) to read as

follows:

(b) The district shall coordinate
career and technical

[
vocational
] education and job training programs with a local

workforce development board authorized by the Texas Workforce

Commission to ensure that district students are equipped with the

skills necessary to compete for current and emerging jobs.

(c)

The district may enter into an agreement with a

governmental entity, including the Texas Workforce Commission, the

Department of Public Safety, the Texas Department of Licensing and

Regulation, other regulatory entities, or the Texas Higher

Education Coordinating Board, to obtain and share data necessary to

support and evaluate district and postsecondary education programs

within the department.

SECTION 10. Chapter 19, Education Code, is amended by

adding Sections 19.012 and 19.013 to read as follows:

Sec.

19.012.

POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION. The district and the

department shall enter into a memorandum of understanding for

postsecondary education programs to be administered by the

district.

Sec.

19.013.

POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION ADVISORY BOARD. (a)

The district shall establish a postsecondary education advisory

board to advise the district and the department regarding

postsecondary education programs.

(b)

The advisory board is composed of members who are

relevant stakeholders, including representatives of:

(1) the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board;

(2) the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation;

(3) the Texas Workforce Commission;

(4)

public institutions of higher education on a

rotating basis;

(5)

an organization that represents the families of

students participating in postsecondary education programs

administered by the district;

(6)

an organization that advocates for the education

of students participating in postsecondary education programs

administered by the district; and

(7)

current or former student participants in

postsecondary education programs administered by the district.

SECTION 11. Section 491.001(a), Government Code, is amended

by amending Subdivisions (6) and (7) and adding Subdivision (6-a)

to read as follows:

(6) "
Office of the independent auditor
[
Internal audit

division
]" means the
office of the independent auditor established

under Section 493.0052
[
internal audit division of the department
].

(6-a)

"Office of the inspector general" means the

office of the inspector general established under Section 493.019.

(7) "
Parole
[
Pardons and paroles
] division" means the

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division of the department.

SECTION 12. Section 491.001(b)(1), Government Code, is

amended to read as follows:

(1) "Board of Pardons and Paroles" means:

(A) the Board of Pardons and Paroles in any

statute relating to a subject under the board's jurisdiction as

provided by Chapter 508; or

(B) the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division in

any statute relating to a subject under the division's jurisdiction

as provided by Chapter 508.

SECTION 13. Section 492.002(a), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(a) The board is composed of nine members appointed by the

governor with the advice and consent of the senate.
At least two

members must have significant business or corporate experience.

The governor may not appoint more than two members who reside in an

area encompassed by the same administrative judicial region, as

determined by Section 74.042.

SECTION 14. Section 492.0031, Government Code, is amended

by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsection (d) to read as

follows:

(b) The training program must provide the person with

information regarding:

(1) the
law governing board and
[
legislation that

created the
] department
operations
[
and the board
];

(2) the programs
, functions, rules, and budget of

[
operated by
] the department;

(3) the
scope of and limitations on the rulemaking

authority
[
role and functions
] of the
board
[
department
];

(4) [
the rules of the department, with an emphasis on

the rules that relate to disciplinary and investigatory authority;

[
(5) the current budget for the department;

[
(6)
] the results of the most recent formal audit of

the department;

(5)
[
(7)
] the requirements of:

(A) the
laws relating to
open meetings
, public

information, administrative procedure, and disclosing conflicts of

interest
[
law, Chapter 551
];
and

(B)
other laws applicable to members of a state

policy-making body in performing their duties
[
the public

information law, Chapter 552;

[
(C)

the administrative procedure law, Chapter

2001; and

[
(D)

other laws relating to public officials,

including conflict of interest laws
]; and

(6)
[
(8)
] any applicable ethics policies adopted by

the department or the Texas Ethics Commission.

(d)

The executive director shall create a training manual

that includes the information required by Subsection (b). The

executive director shall distribute a copy of the training manual

annually to each member of the board. Each member of the board

shall sign and submit to the executive director a statement

acknowledging that the member received and has reviewed the

training manual.

SECTION 15. Section 492.012, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 492.012. SUNSET PROVISION. The Texas Board of

Criminal Justice and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice are

subject to Chapter 325 (Texas Sunset Act). Unless continued in

existence as provided by that chapter, the board and the department

are abolished September 1,
2037
[
2025
].

SECTION 16. Section 492.013, Government Code, is amended by

amending Subsections (a), (c), and (e) and adding Subsections (a-1)

and (b-1) to read as follows:

(a)
The board shall maintain oversight and supervision of

the following independent reporting entities:

(1) the office of the independent auditor;

(2) the office of the independent ombudsman;

(3) the office of the inspector general;

(4)

the office of the ombudsperson appointed under

Section 501.172; and

(5)

the office providing legal representation under

Article 26.051, Code of Criminal Procedure, and Section 841.005,

Health and Safety Code.

(a-1)
The board may adopt rules as necessary for its own

procedures and for operation of the department
and the independent

reporting entities
.

(b-1)

The board shall employ a director for each independent

reporting entity, and each director serves at the pleasure of the

board.

(c) The board shall approve the operating budget of
and

requests for appropriations for
the department
and the independent

reporting entities
[
and the department's request for

appropriations
].

(e) The board shall develop and implement policies that

clearly separate the policymaking responsibilities of the board and

the management responsibilities of the executive director and the

staff of the department
and the independent reporting entities
.

SECTION 17. Section 493.002(a), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(a) The following divisions are within the department:

(1) the community justice assistance division;

(2) the institutional division;

(3) the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division;
and

(4) [
the state jail division;

[
(5) the internal audit division; and

[
(6)
] the
rehabilitation and reentry
[
programs and

services
] division.

SECTION 18. Section 493.0021(a), Government Code, is

amended to read as follows:

(a) Notwithstanding Sections 493.002, 493.003, 493.004,

493.005, [
493.0051,
] 493.0052, [
as added by Chapter 1360, Acts of

the 75th Legislature, Regular Session, 1997,
] and
493.0053

[
493.0052, as added by Chapter 490, Acts of the 75th Legislature,

Regular Session, 1997
], the executive director, with the approval

of the board, may:

(1) create divisions in addition to those listed in

Section 493.002 and assign to the newly created divisions any

duties and powers imposed on or granted to an existing division or

to the department generally;

(2) eliminate any division listed in Section 493.002

or created under this section and assign any duties or powers

previously assigned to the eliminated division to another division

listed in Section 493.002 or created under this section; or

(3) eliminate all divisions listed in Section 493.002

or created under this section and reorganize the distribution of

powers and duties granted to or imposed on a division in any manner

the executive director determines is best for the proper

administration of the department.

SECTION 19. Section 493.004, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 493.004. INSTITUTIONAL DIVISION. The institutional

division shall operate and manage
:

(1)
the state prison system
; and

(2)

state jails to confine defendants described by

Section 507.002
.

SECTION 20. Section 493.005, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 493.005.
PAROLE
[
PARDONS AND PAROLES
] DIVISION. The

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division shall supervise and

reintegrate
individuals
[
felons
] into society after release from

confinement.

SECTION 21. Section 493.0052, Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

Sec. 493.0052.
OFFICE OF THE INDEPENDENT AUDITOR
[
INTERNAL

AUDIT DIVISION
]. (a)
The office of the independent auditor is

established under the supervision of the board.

(b)
The board shall hire a director for the
office of the

independent auditor
[
internal audit division
]. The employment of

the director may be terminated only with the approval of the board.

(c)
[
(b)
] The
office of the independent auditor
[
internal

audit division
] shall conduct a program of internal auditing in

accordance with Chapter 2102. The program may include internal

audits, contract audits, and community supervision and corrections

department audits for the department. The
office
[
division
] shall:

(1) conduct recurring financial and management

audits;

(2) conduct internal audits to evaluate department

programs and the economy and efficiency of those programs; and

(3) recommend improvements in management and programs

on the basis of evaluations made under this subsection.

(d)
[
(c)
] The director of the
office of the independent

auditor
[
internal audit division
] shall send reports, audits,

evaluations, and recommendations to the board and to the executive

director. The director shall report directly to the board at least

once a year on:

(1) the activities of the
office
[
division
]; and

(2) the response of the department to recommendations

made by the
office
[
division
].

(e)
[
(d)
] The director shall report directly to the board on

other matters at the times required by board policy.

SECTION 22. Section 493.0053, Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

Sec. 493.0053.
REHABILITATION AND REENTRY
[
PROGRAMS AND

SERVICES
] DIVISION. (a) The
rehabilitation and reentry
[
programs

and services
] division shall administer those rehabilitation and

reintegration programs and services designated by the board under

Subsection (b).

(b) The board shall determine which programs and services

operating under the authority of the department are designed for

the primary purpose of rehabilitating inmates and shall designate

those programs and services as programs and services provided under

the direction of the
rehabilitation and reentry
[
programs and

services
] division.

SECTION 23. Section 493.0083, Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

Sec. 493.0083. PROGRAM EVALUATION CAPABILITY. The

department shall maintain a program evaluation capability separate

from the
rehabilitation and reentry
[
programs and services
]

division to determine the effectiveness of rehabilitation and

reintegration programs and services provided to inmates and other

offenders under the jurisdiction of the department.

SECTION 24. Chapter 493, Government Code, is amended by

adding Section 493.0084 to read as follows:

Sec.

493.0084.

INVENTORY AND EVALUATION OF ACTIVE PROGRAMS.

(a) The department shall develop and maintain a comprehensive

inventory of active programs and activities offered in department

facilities that includes the following information for each

program:

(1) program goals;

(2) program capacity; and

(3) facilities where the program is offered.

(b)

The department shall make the inventory available to the

public on the department's Internet website and continuously update

the inventory.

(c)

The department shall collect and analyze data for the

programs described by Subsection (a) to provide oversight of the

programs and to improve program offerings.

(d)

In carrying out the department's duties under

Subsection (c), the department shall:

(1)

for programs claiming rehabilitative or reentry

effects:

(A) collect results-based performance data;

(B)

work with qualified internal or external

researchers to develop criteria to evaluate the programs; and

(C)

use the criteria developed under Paragraph

(B) to evaluate the programs, including the data described by

Paragraph (A);

(2)

create a separate correctional elective programs

and activities category for non-evidence-based and

non-evidence-informed programs and develop criteria to evaluate

the programs;

(3)

collect and analyze relevant data for program

participants in programs claiming rehabilitative or reentry

effects, such as:

(A) institutional disciplinary violations;

(B) subsequent arrests;

(C) subsequent convictions or confinements;

(D) employment obtained following release; and

(E) cost of confinement; and

(4)

use the data described by Subdivision (3) to

produce and compare recidivism rates and other correctional impact

trends and to make changes to the programs as needed.

(e)

The department may make structural or programmatic

adjustments to improve program performance in response to a program

evaluation under this section indicating poor program performance.

(f)

Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,

the department shall submit a report on the department's analysis

of programs described by Subsection (a) to the board, the Board of

Pardons and Paroles, the governor, the lieutenant governor, the

speaker of the house of representatives, and each standing

committee of the legislature with primary jurisdiction over the

department.

(g)

The department may enter into a memorandum of

understanding with other entities, including the Texas Workforce

Commission, the Office of Court Administration of the Texas

Judicial System, the Department of Public Safety, the Texas

Department of Licensing and Regulation, other regulatory entities,

and institutions of higher education, to obtain and share data

necessary to evaluate programs under this section.

SECTION 25. Section 493.009(f)(4), Government Code, is

amended to read as follows:

(4) The department, immediately on receiving notice,

shall request the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division to reassume

custody of the defendant if the defendant was required to

participate in the program following modification of parole. The

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division shall immediately take action

in accordance with established policies and procedures of the Board

of Pardons and Paroles to remove the defendant from the program. If

a parole panel revokes the defendant's parole, the admission of the

defendant to the institutional division is an admission for which

the department must account in the scheduled admissions policy

established under Section 499.071.

SECTION 26. Section 493.016(d), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(d) The department shall provide
notice
[
a written copy
] of

the department's policies and procedures relating to complaint

investigation and resolution to:

(1) all department employees; and

(2) each person filing a complaint.

SECTION 27. Section 493.019, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 493.019.
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
[
ENFORCEMENT

OFFICERS
].
(a)

The office of the inspector general is established

under the direction of the board as an independent law enforcement

agency and is responsible for preventing and investigating:

(1)

offenses committed by department employees and

inmates; and

(2)

offenses committed at a facility operated by or

under contract with the department or at any facility in which an

individual in the custody of the department is housed or receives

medical or mental health treatment, including:

(A)

unauthorized or illegal entry into a

department facility;

(B)

the introduction of contraband into a

department facility;

(C)

escape from a department facility and parole

absconders;

(D) organized criminal activity; and

(E)

violations of department policy or

procedure.

(b)

The board shall employ a commissioned peace officer as

the inspector general, who may be terminated by board action.

(c)
The inspector general may
employ and commission

[
appoint employees who are certified by the Texas Commission on Law

Enforcement as qualified to be
] peace officers
for the purpose of

carrying out the duties described by this section
[
to serve under

the direction of the inspector general and assist the inspector

general in performing the enforcement duties of the department
].

(d)

Peace officers employed and commissioned under

Subsection (c) must:

(1)

be licensed as an officer under Chapter 1701,

Occupations Code; and

(2)

complete advanced courses relating to the duties

of peace officers employed and commissioned under Subsection (c) as

part of any continuing education requirements for the peace

officers.

(e)

The office of the inspector general shall work

cooperatively with other law enforcement agencies while performing

its duties under this section or other law.

SECTION 28. Chapter 493, Government Code, is amended by

adding Section 493.036 to read as follows:

Sec.

493.036.

LONG-TERM FACILITIES PLAN. (a) The

department shall prepare a 10-year plan that identifies the

department's facility and capacity needs.

(b)

In developing the plan under Subsection (a), the

department:

(1)

must consider the various regional needs of the

state, including any ancillary or community benefits associated

with department facilities; and

(2) may contract with a third party as needed.

(c)

Not later than December 1, 2026, and every fourth

anniversary of that date, the department shall submit:

(1) the plan to the board for approval; and

(2)

the approved plan to the governor, the lieutenant

governor, the speaker of the house of representatives, and each

standing legislative committee with jurisdiction over

appropriations or the department.

SECTION 29. Section 497.022, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 497.022. CONTRACTS. The department may contract with:

(1) another state, the federal government, a foreign

government, or an agency of any of those governments to manufacture

for or sell to those governments prison-made articles or products;

(2) a private or independent institution of higher

education to manufacture for or sell to that school or institution

prison-made articles or products; or

(3) a private school or a [
visually handicapped
]

person
with visual impairment
in this state to manufacture Braille

textbooks or other instructional aids for the education of

[
visually handicapped
] persons
with visual impairment
.

SECTION 30. Section 497.094(b), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(b) The department and the Texas Workforce Investment

Council by rule shall adopt a memorandum of understanding that

establishes the respective responsibility of those entities to

provide through local workforce development boards job training and

employment assistance to persons formerly sentenced to the
custody

of the department
[
institutional division or the state jail

division
] and information on services available to employers or

potential employers of those persons. The department shall

coordinate the development of the memorandum of understanding.

SECTION 31. Section 497.112, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 497.112. AGRICULTURAL EFFICIENCY AND ECONOMY.

(a) The
department
[
institutional division
] shall review annually

the
department's
agricultural operations [
of the division
]. The

review must include:

(1) a cost-effectiveness analysis of all agricultural

programs;

(2) a determination as to whether the
department

[
institutional division
] could more economically purchase certain

agricultural products rather than produce those products; and

(3) a determination as to whether certain agricultural

operations performed by inmates could be mechanized, taking into

account whether mechanization would adversely affect security or

inmate discipline.

(b) The
department
[
institutional division
] shall use the

information provided by the annual review in developing and

improving agricultural operations.

(c) The
department
[
institutional division
] shall provide

the board with a copy of the annual review required by this section.

SECTION 32. Section 498.001(1), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(1) "Inmate" means a person imprisoned by order of a

court, whether the person is actually imprisoned in a facility

operated by or under contract with the institutional division or is

under the supervision or custody of the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division.

SECTION 33. Section 499.001(3), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(3) "Pre-parolee" means an eligible inmate of whom the

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division has assumed custody.

SECTION 34. Sections 499.002(a) and (b), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a) The
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division may assume

custody of an eligible inmate not more than one year before the

inmate's presumptive parole date or mandatory supervision release

date. The eligible inmate becomes a pre-parolee on the date the

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division assumes custody, and the

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division immediately shall transfer

the pre-parolee to a community residential facility. Except as

otherwise provided by this subchapter, the pre-parolee may serve

the remainder of the pre-parolee's sentence before release on

parole in the facility designated by the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division.

(b) At the time of the transfer of the pre-parolee, the

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division shall designate a community

residential facility as the pre-parolee's assigned unit of

confinement.

SECTION 35. Sections 499.0021(b) and (c), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(b) The
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division may assume

custody of an inmate who is eligible for transfer under this section

not earlier than one year before the inmate's presumptive parole

date. The inmate becomes a pre-parolee on the date the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division assumes custody, and the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division immediately shall transfer the

pre-parolee to a facility under contract with the department, which

may be a community residential facility, a community corrections

facility listed in Section 509.001, or a county correctional

facility. A pre-parolee transferred under this section is

considered to be in the actual physical custody of the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division.

(c) A pre-parolee transferred by the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division to a facility under this section is subject to the

provisions of Sections 499.002(c), 499.004, and 499.005 in the same

manner as if the person were a pre-parolee who had been transferred

to a community residential facility under Section 499.002.

SECTION 36. Sections 499.003(b), (c), and (d), Government

Code, are amended to read as follows:

(b) The
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division may authorize

the transfer of an eligible person from a jail in this state, a

federal correctional institution, or a jail or correctional

institution in another state to a secure community residential

facility designated by the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division

not more than one year before the person's presumptive parole date

or mandatory supervision release date. A person transferred under

this section is considered to be in the actual physical custody of

the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division.

(c) A person transferred by the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division to a secure community residential facility is subject to

the provisions of Sections 499.002(c), 499.004, and 499.005 in the

same manner as if the person is a pre-parolee who had been

transferred to a community residential facility under Section

499.002.

(d) The
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division may request of

a sheriff that the sheriff forward to the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division copies of any records possessed by the sheriff

that are relevant to the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division in

its determination as to whether to transfer a person from the county

jail to a secure community residential facility, and the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division shall request the sheriff to forward

to the institutional division and to the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division the information relating to the defendant the

sheriff would be required under Section 8, Article 42.09, Code of

Criminal Procedure, to deliver to the department had the defendant

been transferred to the institutional division. The
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division shall determine whether the

information forwarded by the sheriff contains a thumbprint taken

from the person in the manner provided by Article 38.33, Code of

Criminal Procedure, and, if not, the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division shall obtain a thumbprint in the manner provided by that

article, and shall forward the thumbprint to the institutional

division for inclusion with the information sent by the

sheriff. The sheriff shall comply with a request from the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division made under this subsection.

SECTION 37. Sections 499.004(b), (c), and (d), Government

Code, are amended to read as follows:

(b) On transfer, the pre-parolee is subject to supervision

by the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division and shall obey the

orders of the Board of Pardons and Paroles and the
parole
[
pardons

and paroles
] division.

(c) A facility director or designee of a facility director

shall immediately report to the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division in writing if the director or designee believes that a

pre-parolee has violated the terms of the pre-parolee's transfer

agreement or the rules of the facility. The
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division may require an agent of the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division or the community residential facility to conduct

a hearing.

(d) If the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division has an

administrative need to deliver the pre-parolee to the custody of

the institutional division or if after a disciplinary hearing the

parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division concurs that a violation has

occurred, the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division may deliver the

pre-parolee to the actual custody of the institutional division and

the institutional division may assign the pre-parolee to a regular

unit of the institutional division. If the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division recommends rescission or revision of the

pre-parolee's presumptive parole date, a parole panel shall rescind

or revise the date unless it determines the action is

inappropriate.

SECTION 38. Sections 499.022(a) and (c), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a) The purpose of this subchapter is to:

(1) allow the
department
[
institutional division
] the

flexibility to house inmates in appropriate settings and determine

the proper amount of available housing; and

(2) provide the executive branch with alternatives to

appropriately balance population, consistent with the intent of

this subchapter, if the population of the
department
[
division
]

reaches 95 percent of capacity or if a backlog of convicted felons

exists in the county jails in this state, as determined by this

subchapter.

(c) This subchapter does not:

(1) create a right on the part of an inmate confined in

the
department
[
institutional division
] to serve the inmate's

sentence in a department with a population below 95 percent of

capacity, as determined by this subchapter;

(2) grant to an inmate the right to be released or to

be considered for release if the inmate population of the

department
[
division
] reaches 95 percent of capacity as determined

under this subchapter;

(3) require a population level below 95 percent of

capacity as determined by this subchapter; or

(4) require the board or the Board of Pardons and

Paroles to take an action under this subchapter because a backlog of

convicted felons exists in the county jails in this state.

SECTION 39. Sections 499.025(a) and (b), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a) If the inmate population of the
department

[
institutional division
] reaches 99 percent or more of capacity,

the
executive
director shall immediately notify [
the executive

director and
] the board in writing of that fact. Until the inmate

population is reduced to less than 99 percent of capacity, the

executive
director shall make a weekly written report to [
the

executive director and
] the board stating the extent to which the

inmate population is less than, equal to, or in excess of capacity.

(b) If the inmate population of the
department

[
institutional division
] reaches 100 percent of capacity or, if the

board
[
attorney general
] has authorized an increase in the

permissible percentage of capacity under Section 499.109, the

inmate population reaches that increased permissible percentage,

the
executive
director shall immediately notify [
the executive

director,
] the board[
,
] and the attorney general in writing of that

fact. The attorney general shall certify to the board in writing

as to whether the
department
[
institutional division
] has reached

100 percent of capacity or, if applicable, the increased

permissible percentage. If the attorney general certifies that

100 percent of capacity has been reached or, if applicable, that the

increased permissible percentage has been reached, the board shall

immediately certify that an emergency overcrowding situation

exists and direct the Board of Pardons and Paroles to proceed in the

manner described by Subsection (c). If the Commission on Jail

Standards determines that in any county jail in this state there

exists an inmate awaiting transfer to the
department
[
institutional

division
] following conviction of a felony or revocation of

probation, parole, or release on mandatory supervision and for whom

all paperwork and processing required for transfer have been

completed for not less than 45 days, the board may direct the Board

of Pardons and Paroles to proceed in the manner described by

Subsection (c).

SECTION 40. Section 499.026(b), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(b) The authority of the board to take the actions listed in

Section 499.025(b) continues until the attorney general, or if

appropriate, the Commission on Jail Standards, certifies in writing

to the board that the overcrowding crisis that produced the

emergency certification under Section 499.025(b) has been

resolved. If the board receives this certification from the

attorney general or the Commission on Jail Standards under this

subsection, the board shall immediately notify the
parole
[
pardons

and paroles
] division that the emergency overcrowding situation no

longer exists.

SECTION 41. Section 499.101, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 499.101.
MAXIMUM CAPACITIES
[
EXISTING UNITS
]. (a)

The
board by rule shall establish
maximum capacities for the units

in the
department.
[
institutional division are as follows:

[
Beto I3,000

[
Beto II888

[
Boyd1,012

[
Briscoe1,012

[
Central720

[
Clemens851

[
Clements2,200

[
Coffield3,000

[
Daniel1,012

[
Darrington1,610

[
Diagnostic1,365

[
Eastham2,050

[
Ellis I1,900

[
Ellis II2,260

[
Ferguson2,100

[
Gatesville1,571

[
Goree1,058

[
Hightower1,012

[
Hilltop761

[
Hobby1,012

[
Hughes2,264

[
Huntsville1,705

[
Jester I323

[
Jester II378

[
Jester III908

[
Lewis1,012

[
McConnell2,264

[
Michael2,264

[
Mountain View718

[
Pack I864

[
Pack II1,088

[
Panpa1,012

[
Ramsey I1,400

[
Ramsey II850

[
Ramsey III1,000

[
Retrieve770

[
Roach1,012

[
Robertson2,264

[
Smith1,012

[
Stiles2,264

[
Terrell2,264

[
Torres1,012

[
Wynne2,300
]

(b) It is the intent of the legislature that as case law

evolves and indicates that maximum capacities
for units in the

department
[
established under Subsection (a)
] may be increased, the

staff of the
department
[
institutional division
] shall use the

procedures established by this subchapter to increase those

capacities. There shall be no cause of action against the

institutional division for failure to take action under this

subsection.

SECTION 42. Section 499.102, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 499.102. STAFF DETERMINATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS.

(a) The staff of the
department
[
institutional division
], on its

own initiative or as directed by the governor or the board, may

recommend to the administration of the institutional division that

the maximum capacity [
established under Section 499.101
] for a unit

be increased if the staff determines through written findings that

the division can increase the maximum capacity and provide:

(1) proper inmate classification and housing within

the unit that is consistent with the classification system;

(2) housing flexibility to allow necessary repairs and

routine and preventive maintenance to be performed without

compromising the classification system;

(3) adequate space in dayrooms;

(4) all meals within a reasonable time, allowing each

inmate a reasonable time within which to eat;

(5) operable hygiene facilities that ensure the

availability of a sufficient number of fixtures to serve the inmate

population;

(6) adequate laundry services;

(7) sufficient staff to:

(A) meet operational and security needs;

(B) meet health care needs, including the needs

of inmates requiring psychiatric care, inmates with an intellectual

disability, and inmates with a physical disability;

(C) provide a safe environment for inmates and

staff; and

(D) provide adequate internal affairs

investigation and review;

(8) medical, dental, and psychiatric care adequate to

ensure:

(A) minimal delays in delivery of service from

the time sick call requests are made until the service is performed;

(B) access to regional medical facilities;

(C) access to the institutional division

hospital at Galveston or contract facilities performing the same

services;

(D) access to specialty clinics; and

(E) a sufficient number of psychiatric inpatient

beds and sheltered beds for inmates with an intellectual

disability;

(9) a fair disciplinary system that ensures due

process and is adequate to ensure safety and order in the unit;

(10) work, vocational, academic, and on-the-job

training programs that afford all eligible inmates with an

opportunity to learn job skills or work habits that can be applied

on release, appropriately staffed and of sufficient quality;

(11) a sufficient number and quality of

nonprogrammatic and recreational activities for all eligible

inmates who choose to participate;

(12) adequate assistance from persons trained in the

law or a law library with a collection containing necessary

materials and space adequate for inmates to use the law library for

study related to legal matters;

(13) adequate space and staffing to permit contact and

noncontact visitation of all eligible inmates;

(14) adequate maintenance programs to repair and

prevent breakdowns caused by increased use of facilities and

fixtures; and

(15) space and staff sufficient to provide all the

services and facilities required by this section.

(b) The staff of the
department
[
institutional division
]

shall request of the Legislative Budget Board an estimate of the

initial cost of implementing the increase in capacity and the

increase in operating costs of the unit for the five years

immediately following the increase in capacity. The Legislative

Budget Board shall provide the staff with the estimates, and the

staff shall attach a copy of the estimates to the recommendations.

(c) The staff of the
department
[
institutional division
]

may not take more than 90 days from the date the process is

initiated to make recommendations on an increase in the maximum

capacity for a unit under this section.

SECTION 43. Section 499.104, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 499.104. OFFICERS' REVIEW AND RECOMMENDATION. The

executive director of the department, the director of the

institutional division, the deputy director for operations, the

deputy director for finance,
the deputy director for programs,
the

division
[
deputy
] director for health services, and the
division

[
assistant
] director for classification and
inmate transportation

[
treatment
] shall independently review staff recommendations for

an increase in the maximum capacity of a unit and the written

findings accompanying the recommendation. Not later than the 30th

day after the date of accepting the comments of the other officers,

if the executive director agrees that the new maximum capacity for

the unit is supported by the findings, the executive director shall

forward the recommendation and findings to the board.

SECTION 44. Section 499.105, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 499.105. BOARD REVIEW AND
IMPLEMENTATION; NOTICE TO

GOVERNOR
[
RECOMMENDATION
]. The board shall review the

recommendation and findings forwarded to the board under Section

499.104. Not later than the 60th day after the date the board

receives the recommendation and findings, the board shall reject

the recommendation or accept or modify the recommendation
.

The

board may establish a new maximum capacity based on the accepted or

modified recommendation.

The board shall
[
and
] forward the

recommendation or modified recommendation and findings to the

governor. The board may not modify the recommendation by

increasing the maximum capacity specified in the recommendation.

SECTION 45. Section 499.108(b), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(b) Maximum capacity for a unit must be established under

this section in the same manner as maximum capacity for a unit is

increased under Sections 499.102, 499.104,
and
499.105[
, 499.106,

and 499.107
], except that time limits on official actions imposed

by those sections do not apply.

SECTION 46. Section 499.109, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 499.109. SYSTEM CAPACITY. (a) The inmate population

of the
department
[
institutional division
] may not exceed 100

percent of the combined capacities of each unit in the
department

[
division
], as determined by this subchapter.

(b) The
board
[
attorney general
] may authorize the

department
[
institutional division
] to increase the inmate

population of the
department
[
division
] above 100 percent, but only

if:

(1) the staff determines through written findings that

the population may be increased without limiting the ability of the

division to transfer inmates between units as necessary for

classification, medical, and security purposes; and

(2) the administration of the department
and
[
,
] the

board[
, and the governor
] approve of the increase, in the same

manner as increases in capacity of individual units are approved

under Sections 499.104
and
[
,
] 499.105[
, and 499.106
].

(c) If the
board
[
attorney general
] authorizes the

department
[
institutional division
] to increase the inmate

population of the
department
[
division
] above 100 percent, the

department
[
institutional division
] shall distribute the

additional admissions permitted by the increase among counties or

groups of counties in the same manner as regular admissions are

distributed under the allocation formula.

SECTION 47. Subchapter F, Chapter 499, Government Code, is

amended by adding Section 499.1214 to read as follows:

Sec.

499.1214.

PEN PACKET SUBMISSION TRAINING. (a)

The

department shall develop and provide annual training for county

employees on the submission of documents required before the

department takes custody of a person being transferred from a

county jail to the department, including documents required under

Sections 8(a) and (c), Article 42.09, Code of Criminal Procedure.

(b)

The training required under this section may be offered

in person or online.

Online training may be offered live or

prerecorded.

SECTION 48. Section 499.156, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 499.156. VOCATIONAL TRAINING. The department shall

adopt a policy under which a representative of a public or private

entity, including a public or private institution of higher

education, may provide vocational training on a voluntary basis to

inmates [
confined in a transfer facility authorized under this

subchapter
].

SECTION 49. Section 501.002, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 501.002. ASSAULT BY EMPLOYEE ON INMATE. If an employee

of the department commits an assault on an inmate housed in a

facility operated by or under contract with the department, the

executive director shall
refer the matter to an appropriate law

enforcement
[
file a complaint with the proper
] official [
of the

county in which the offense occurred
]. If an employee is charged

with an assault described by this section, an inmate or person who

was an inmate at the time of the alleged offense may testify in a

prosecution of the offense.

SECTION 50. Section 501.009, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 501.009. VOLUNTEER AND FAITH-BASED ORGANIZATIONS[
;

REPORT
]. (a) The department shall adopt a policy that requires

department staff
[
each warden
] to identify volunteer and

faith-based organizations that provide programs for inmates housed

in facilities operated by the department. The policy must require

the staff
[
each warden
] to actively encourage volunteer and

faith-based organizations to provide the following programs for

inmates in
department facilities
[
the warden's facility
]:

(1) literacy and education programs;

(2) life skills programs;

(3) job skills programs;

(4) parent-training programs;

(5) drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs;

(6) support group programs;

(7) arts and crafts programs; and

(8) other programs determined by the department to aid

inmates in the transition between confinement and society and to

reduce incidence of recidivism among inmates.

(b) The policy must require
the staff to solicit feedback

from the warden and chaplains of each facility on the facility's

needs regarding volunteer and faith-based organization provided

programs.

(c)

The department shall include in the biennial report

required under Section 493.0084(f)
[
that each warden submit a

report to the board not later than December 31 of each year that

includes, for the preceding fiscal year,
] a summary of:

(1) the programs provided to inmates under this

section; and

(2) the actions taken [
by the warden
] to identify

volunteer and faith-based organizations willing to provide

programs to inmates and to encourage those organizations to provide

programs in the
department facilities
[
warden's facility
].

SECTION 51. Sections 501.015(b) and (d), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(b) When an inmate is released on parole, mandatory

supervision, or conditional pardon, the inmate is entitled to

receive $100 from the department and transportation at the expense

of the department to the location at which the inmate is required to

report to a parole officer by the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division. The inmate shall receive $50 on [
his
] release from the

institution and $50 on initially reporting to a parole officer at

the location at which the inmate is required to report to a parole

officer. If an inmate is released and is not required by the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division to report to a parole officer or is

authorized by the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division to report

to a location outside this state, the department shall provide the

inmate with $100 and, at the expense of the department,

transportation to:

(1) the location of the inmate's residence, if the

residence is in this state; or

(2) a transit point determined appropriate by the

department, if the inmate's residence is outside this state or the

inmate is required by the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
] division to

report to a location outside this state.

(d) The
department
[
director of the institutional division
]

shall provide the comptroller with funds sufficient to maintain not

less than $100,000 in a bank or banks in
this state
[
Huntsville,

Texas,
] for the purpose of making prompt payments to inmates

required by Subsection (b). Funds maintained in a bank under this

subsection must be secured by bonds or other securities approved by

the attorney general.

SECTION 52. Section 501.017(b), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(b) The department may not enforce a claim or lien

established under this section if the inmate has a surviving spouse

or a surviving dependent or
child with a disability
[
disabled

child
].

SECTION 53. Section 501.054(h), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(h) The department shall report to the legislature not later

than
December 1
[
January 15
] of each
even-numbered
[
odd-numbered
]

year concerning the implementation of this section and the

participation of inmates and employees of the department in

education programs established under this section.

SECTION 54. Section 501.055(a), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(a) If an inmate dies while in the custody of the

department, an employee of the facility who is in charge of the

inmate shall immediately notify the nearest justice of the peace

serving in the county in which the inmate died and the office of

inspector general
[
internal affairs for the department
]. The

justice shall personally inspect the body and make an inquiry as to

the cause of death. The justice shall make written copies of

evidence taken during the inquest, and give one copy to the director

and one copy to a district judge serving in the county in which the

inmate died. The judge shall provide the copy to the grand jury

and, if the judge determines the evidence indicates wrongdoing,

instruct the grand jury to thoroughly investigate the cause of

death.

SECTION 55. Sections 501.057(a) and (b), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a) The department shall establish a system to identify

[
mentally ill
] inmates
with mental illness
who are nearing

eligibility for release on parole.

(b) Not later than the 30th day before the initial parole

eligibility date of an inmate identified as
having a mental illness

[
mentally ill
], an institutional division psychiatrist shall

examine the inmate. The psychiatrist shall file a sworn

application for court-ordered temporary mental health services

under Chapter 574, Health and Safety Code, if the psychiatrist

determines that the inmate
has a mental illness
[
is mentally ill
]

and as a result of the illness the inmate meets at least one of the

criteria listed in Section 574.034 or 574.0345, Health and Safety

Code.

SECTION 56. The heading to Section 501.069, Government

Code, is amended to read as follows:

Sec. 501.069.
OFFENDERS WITH INTELLECTUAL OR DEVELOPMENTAL

DISABILITIES
[
DEVELOPMENTALLY DISABLED OFFENDER PROGRAM
].

SECTION 57. Section 501.092(i), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(i) Not later than
December
[
September
] 1 of each

even-numbered year, the department shall deliver a report of the

results of evaluations conducted under Subsection (b)(7) to the

lieutenant governor, the speaker of the house of representatives,

and each standing committee of the senate and house of

representatives having primary jurisdiction over the department.

SECTION 58. Section 501.093(c), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(c) The memorandum of understanding must establish methods

for:

(1) identifying inmates with a history of drug or

alcohol abuse;

(2) notifying the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division and the Health and Human Services Commission as to when an

inmate with a history of drug or alcohol abuse is to be released and

as to the inmate's release destination;

(3) identifying the services needed by inmates with a

history of drug or alcohol abuse to reenter the community

successfully; and

(4) determining the manner in which each agency that

participates in the establishment of the memorandum can share

information about inmates and use that information to provide

continuity of care.

SECTION 59. Section 501.095(c), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(c) The memorandum of understanding must establish methods

for:

(1) identifying inmates with a history of chronic

unemployment;

(2) notifying the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division and the commission as to when an inmate with a history of

chronic unemployment is to be released and as to the inmate's

release destination;

(3) identifying the services needed by inmates with a

history of chronic unemployment to reenter the community

successfully; and

(4) determining the manner in which each agency that

participates in the establishment of the memorandum can share

information about inmates and use that information to provide

continuity of care.

SECTION 60. Subchapter C, Chapter 501, Government Code, is

amended by adding Section 501.104 to read as follows:

Sec.

501.104.

STRATEGIC PLAN FOR REHABILITATION AND REENTRY

PROGRAMS. (a) In this section, "parole-voted program" has the

meaning assigned by Section 508.1521.

(b)

The department and the Windham School District shall

jointly develop a strategic plan for the provision of

rehabilitation and reentry programs to inmates.

The strategic plan

must include program objectives and timelines intended to:

(1)

increase program efficiencies, including

eliminating delays in placing inmates into parole-voted programs;

(2) reduce program redundancies;

(3)

incorporate new evidence-based and

evidence-informed program approaches; and

(4) incorporate technology-based solutions.

(b-1)

The strategic plan must include clear steps and

timelines to reduce, by September 1, 2027, overall parole-voted

program placement timelines by at least 50 percent compared to the

timelines on August 31, 2023.

This subsection expires December 31,

2027.

(c)

In developing the strategic plan, the department shall

evaluate therapeutic service contracts and obligations and

renegotiate the contracts and obligations as necessary to meet

current and projected program needs.

(d)

The department and the Windham School District shall

jointly update the strategic plan at least once every five years.

(e)

Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,

the department and the Windham School District shall submit a joint

report on the implementation of the strategic plan to the board, the

Board of Pardons and Paroles, the governor, the lieutenant

governor, the speaker of the house of representatives, and each

standing committee of the legislature with primary jurisdiction

over the department.

(f)

In preparing the report under Subsection (e), the

department and the Windham School District shall consider the most

recent report prepared under Section 501.103.

SECTION 61. Section 501.138(c), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(c) If the
executive director
[
managed health care

administrator
] has knowledge that a potential ground for removal

exists, the
executive director
[
administrator
] shall notify the

presiding officer of the committee of the potential ground. The

presiding officer shall then notify the governor and the attorney

general that a potential ground for removal exists. If the

potential ground for removal involves the presiding officer, the

executive director
[
managed health care administrator
] shall

notify the next highest ranking officer of the committee, who shall

then notify the governor and the attorney general that a potential

ground for removal exists.

SECTION 62. Section 501.140, Government Code, is amended by

amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsection (d) to read as

follows:

(b) The training program must provide the person with

information regarding:

(1) the
law governing committee operations

[
legislation that created the committee
];

(2) the programs
, functions, rules, and budget of

[
operated by
] the committee;

(3) the
scope of and limitations on the rulemaking

authority
[
role and functions
] of the committee;

(4) [
the rules of the committee with an emphasis on the

rules that relate to disciplinary and investigatory authority;

[
(5) the current budget for the committee;

[
(6)
] the results of the most recent formal audit of

the committee;

(5)
[
(7)
] the requirements of:

(A)
laws relating to
[
the
] open meetings
, public

information, administrative procedure, and disclosing conflicts of

interest
[
law, Chapter 551
];
and

(B)
other laws applicable to members of a state

policy-making body in performing their duties
[
the public

information law, Chapter 552;

[
(C)

the administrative procedure law, Chapter

2001; and

[
(D)

other laws relating to public officials,

including conflict-of-interest laws
]; and

(6)
[
(8)
] any applicable ethics policies adopted by

the
department
[
committee
] or the Texas Ethics Commission.

(d)

The executive director shall create a training manual

that includes the information required by Subsection (b). The

executive director shall distribute a copy of the training manual

annually to each member of the committee. Each member of the

committee shall sign and submit to the executive director a

statement acknowledging that the member received and has reviewed

the training manual.

SECTION 63. The heading to Chapter 507, Government Code, is

amended to read as follows:

CHAPTER 507. STATE JAIL
MANAGEMENT
[
DIVISION
]

SECTION 64. Sections 507.001(a) and (b), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a) The
department
[
state jail division
] may operate,

maintain, and manage state jail felony facilities to confine

inmates described by Section 507.002, and the department may

finance and construct those facilities. The
department
[
state jail

division
], with the approval of the board, may contract with [
the

institutional division,
] a private vendor, a community supervision

and corrections department, or the commissioners court of a county

for the construction, operation, maintenance, or management of a

state jail felony facility. The community justice assistance

division shall assist the
department
[
state jail division
] to

contract with a community supervision and corrections department

for the construction, operation, maintenance, or management of a

state jail felony facility. [
The state jail division shall consult

with the community justice assistance division before contracting

with a community supervision and corrections department under this

section.
] A community supervision and corrections department or

the commissioners court of a county that contracts under this

section may subcontract with a private vendor for the provision of

any or all services described by this subsection. A community

supervision and corrections department that contracts under this

section may subcontract with the commissioners court of a county

for the provision of any or all services described by this

subsection. The board may contract with a private vendor or the

commissioners court of a county for the financing or construction

of a state jail felony facility.

(b) The
department
[
community justice assistance division

and the state jail division
] shall develop and implement work

programs and programs of rehabilitation, education, and recreation

in state jail felony facilities. For each state jail felony

facility, the community justice assistance division and the

department
[
state jail division
] shall consult with the community

supervision and corrections departments and the community justice

councils served by the facility in developing programs in that

facility, and shall develop the programs in a manner that makes

appropriate use of facilities and personnel of the community

supervision and corrections departments. In developing the

programs, the
department
[
state jail division
] and the community

justice assistance division shall attempt to structure programs so

that they are operated on a 90-day cycle, although the
department

and the division
[
divisions
] should deviate from a 90-day schedule

as necessary to meet the requirements of a particular program.

SECTION 65. Section 507.002, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.002. ELIGIBLE DEFENDANTS. The
department
[
state

jail division
] may confine in a state jail felony facility

authorized by this subchapter defendants required by a judge to

serve a term of confinement in a state jail felony facility

following a grant of deferred adjudication for or conviction of an

offense punishable as a state jail felony.

SECTION 66. Section 507.006(a), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter,

the
department
[
state jail division
], with the approval of the

board, may designate one or more state jail felony facilities to

treat inmates who are eligible for confinement in a substance abuse

felony punishment facility under Section 493.009 or to house

inmates who are sentenced to imprisonment in the institutional

division, but only if the designation does not deny placement in a

state jail felony facility of defendants required to serve terms of

confinement in a facility following conviction of state jail

felonies. The
department
[
division
] may not house in a state jail

felony facility an inmate who:

(1) has a history of or has shown a pattern of violent

or assaultive behavior in county jail or a facility operated by the

department; or

(2) will increase the likelihood of harm to the public

if housed in the facility.

SECTION 67. Section 507.022, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.022. EMPLOYEES' SALARIES, ROOM AND BOARD, AND

MEDICAL CARE. (a) Salaries of
department
employees
assigned to a

[
of the
] state jail
felony facility
[
division
] and the provision of

board, lodging, uniforms, and other provisions to employees are as

provided by the General Appropriations Act.

(b)
Department employees assigned to a
[
Employees of the
]

state jail
felony facility
[
division
] who are injured in the line of

duty are entitled to receive free medical care and hospitalization

from institutional division doctors and the institutional division

hospital.

SECTION 68. Sections 507.023(a) and (b), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a) The
department
[
state jail division
] shall establish

and provide education programs to educate
department
[
state jail

division
] employees and defendants in state jail felony facilities

about AIDS and HIV in the same manner as the institutional division

establishes and provides programs for employees and inmates under

Section 501.054.

(b) The
department
[
state jail division
] shall adopt a

policy for handling a defendant with AIDS or HIV and shall test a

defendant for AIDS or HIV in the same manner and subject to the same

conditions as apply to the institutional division under Section

501.054.

SECTION 69. Section 507.024, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.024. TRANSPORTATION OF DEFENDANTS. The board

shall adopt rules to provide for the safe transfer of defendants

from counties to state jail felony facilities. A sheriff may

transport defendants to a state jail felony facility if the sheriff

is able to perform the service as economically as if the service

were performed by the
department
[
division
]. The
department
[
state

jail division
] is responsible for the cost of transportation of

defendants to
a state jail felony facility
[
the division
].

Defendants may be transported with other persons being transported

to the custody of the department provided appropriate security

precautions prescribed by policies of the department are taken.

SECTION 70. Section 507.025, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.025. MEDICAL CARE. The
department
[
state jail

division
], with the approval of the board, may contract with [
the

institutional division,
] a private vendor[
,
] or any public health

care provider for the provision of medical services to defendants

in state jail felony facilities.

SECTION 71. Section 507.029, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.029. USE OF INMATE LABOR. The department may use

the labor of inmates of the institutional division in any work or

community service program or project performed by
a
[
the
] state

jail
felony facility
[
division
].

SECTION 72. Sections 507.030(a-1) and (b), Government Code,

are amended to read as follows:

(a-1) The
department
[
state jail division
] shall allow the

governor, members of the legislature, and officials of the

executive and judicial branches to enter during business hours any

part of a
state jail felony
facility operated by the
department

[
division
], for the purpose of observing the operations of the

department
[
division
]. A visitor described by this subsection may

talk with defendants away from [
division
] employees
of the state

jail felony facility
.

(b) The
department
[
state jail division
] shall establish a

visitation policy for persons confined in state jail felony

facilities. The visitation policy must:

(1) allow visitation by a guardian of a defendant

confined in a state jail felony facility to the same extent as the

defendant's next of kin, including placing the guardian on the

defendant's approved visitors list on the guardian's request and

providing the guardian access to the defendant during a facility's

standard visitation hours if the defendant is otherwise eligible to

receive visitors; and

(2) require the guardian to provide the director of

the facility with letters of guardianship before being allowed to

visit the defendant.

SECTION 73. Section 507.031, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.031. FURLOUGH PROGRAM. (a) The director of a

state jail felony facility may grant a furlough to a defendant so

that the defendant may:

(1) obtain a medical diagnosis or medical treatment;

(2) obtain treatment and supervision at a facility

operated by the Health and Human Services Commission;

(3) attend a funeral or visit a critically ill

relative; or

(4) participate in a programmatic activity sanctioned

by the
department
[
state jail division
].

(b) The
department
[
state jail division
] shall adopt

policies for the administration of the furlough program.

(c) A defendant furloughed under this section is considered

to be in the custody of the
department
[
state jail division
], even

if the defendant is not under physical guard while furloughed.

SECTION 74. Section 507.033, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 507.033. REHABILITATION PROGRAMS. (a) The
department

[
state jail division
] may allow a
state jail
defendant who is

capable of serving as a tutor to tutor functionally illiterate

defendants and shall actively encourage volunteer organizations to

aid in the tutoring of defendants. A person who acts as a tutor may

function only as a teacher and advisor to a defendant and may not

exercise supervisory authority or control over the defendant.

(b) The
department
[
state jail division
] shall actively

encourage volunteer organizations to provide the following

programs for defendants who are housed in
state jail felony

facilities operated by or under contract with the
department

[
division
]:

(1) literacy and education programs;

(2) life skills programs;

(3) job skills programs;

(4) parent-training programs;

(5) drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs;

(6) support group programs;

(7) arts and crafts programs; and

(8) other programs determined by the
department

[
division
] to aid defendants confined in state jail felony

facilities in the transition from confinement or supervision back

into society and to reduce incidents of recidivism among

defendants.

SECTION 75. Sections 508.001(3), (4), (5), and (6),

Government Code, are amended to read as follows:

(3) "Director" means the director of the
parole

[
pardons and paroles
] division.

(4) "Division" means the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division.

(5) "Mandatory supervision" means the release of an

eligible inmate sentenced to the institutional division so that the

inmate may serve the remainder of the inmate's sentence not on

parole but under the supervision of the
parole
[
pardons and

paroles
] division.

(6) "Parole" means the discretionary and conditional

release of an eligible inmate sentenced to the institutional

division so that the inmate may serve the remainder of the inmate's

sentence under the supervision of the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division.

SECTION 76. Section 508.0362, Government Code, is amended

by amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsection (d) to

read as follows:

(a) [
(1)
] A person who is appointed to and qualifies for

office as a member of the board may not vote, deliberate, or be

counted as a member in attendance at a meeting of the board until

the person completes [
at least one course of
] a training program

that complies with this section.

[
(2)
] A parole commissioner employed by the board may

not vote or deliberate on a matter described by Section 508.0441

until the person completes [
at least one course of
] a training

program that complies with this section.

(b)
The
[
A
] training program must provide
the person with

information [
to the person
] regarding:

(1) the
law governing board operations
[
enabling

legislation that created the board
];

(2) the programs
, functions, rules, and budget of

[
operated by
] the board;

(3) the
scope of and limitations on the rulemaking

authority
[
role and functions
] of the board [
and parole

commissioners
];

(4) [
the rules of the board;

[
(5) the current budget for the board;

[
(6)
] the results of the most recent formal audit of

the board;

(5)
[
(7)
] the requirements of [
the
]:

(A)
laws relating to
open meetings
, public

information, administrative procedure, and disclosing conflicts of

interest
[
law, Chapter 551
];
and

(B)
other laws applicable to members of a state

policy-making body in performing their duties
[
open records law,

Chapter 552; and

[
(C) administrative procedure law, Chapter 2001;

[
(8)

the requirements of the conflict of interest laws

and other laws relating to public officials
]; and

(6)
[
(9)
] any applicable ethics policies adopted by

the board or the Texas Ethics Commission.

(d)

The board administrator shall create a training manual

that includes the information required by Subsection (b). The

board administrator shall distribute a copy of the training manual

annually to each board member and parole commissioner. Each board

member and parole commissioner shall sign and submit to the board

administrator a statement acknowledging that the person received

and has reviewed the training manual.

SECTION 77. Subchapter B, Chapter 508, Government Code, is

amended by adding Sections 508.0421 and 508.0455 to read as

follows:

Sec.

508.0421.

TRAINING PROGRAM ON MEDICALLY RECOMMENDED

INTENSIVE SUPERVISION. (a) The board shall develop and provide a

comprehensive training program on the release of inmates on

medically recommended intensive supervision under Section 508.146

for board members and parole commissioners serving on a parole

panel under that section. The program must include:

(1)

background information on medically recommended

intensive supervision; and

(2) training and education regarding:

(A)

statutory requirements and board rules for

the consideration and release of inmates on medically recommended

intensive supervision;

(B)

the supervision of persons released on

medically recommended intensive supervision, including information

on:

(i)

the imposition of graduated sanctions

on a releasee for a violation of a condition of release; and

(ii)

the imposition and modification of

special conditions on a releasee; and

(C)

how to read and review a written report

described by Section 508.146(h)(2).

(b) In developing the training program, the board shall:

(1)

use available data on medically recommended

intensive supervision; and

(2)

consult with the department and a practicing

physician and psychiatrist as needed.

(c)

The board shall develop a condensed version of the

training program that includes only the training and education

described by Subsection (a)(2).

(d)

A member of a parole panel described by Section

508.146(e) may not participate in a vote of the panel related to the

release of an inmate on medically recommended intensive supervision

until the member completes the training program described by

Subsection (a). Each member must complete the version of the

training program described by Subsection (c) biennially after

completing the initial training to remain eligible to participate

in a vote of the panel related to the release of an inmate on

medically recommended intensive supervision.

The board shall

inform each member of any subsequent changes to the training

developed under Subsection (a) that are made after the member

completes the training required by this subsection.

Sec.

508.0455.

PAROLE PANEL DATA. (a) The board shall

coordinate with the department to collect and analyze data on the

release of inmates on parole, mandatory supervision, or medically

recommended intensive supervision and the use of special conditions

and graduated sanctions to evaluate outcomes and trends.

(b)

Using the data collected under Subsection (a), the board

shall determine a method for evaluating the consistency of

revocation decisions across all three-voter parole panels.

(c)

The board shall use its findings from the data collected

under this section in developing the training required under

Sections 508.041 and 508.042.

SECTION 78. Section 508.054(c), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(c) The board shall periodically notify the complaint

parties of the status of the complaint until final disposition

unless the notice would jeopardize an ongoing investigation
.

SECTION 79. The heading to Subchapter D, Chapter 508,

Government Code, is amended to read as follows:

SUBCHAPTER D.
PAROLE
[
PARDONS AND PAROLES
] DIVISION

SECTION 80. Section 508.113, Government Code, is amended by

adding Subsection (e) to read as follows:

(e)

The division may establish a waiver procedure for when

the director is unable to appoint persons meeting the

qualifications established under Subsection (c).

SECTION 81. Section 508.1131, Government Code, is amended

by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (a-1) to read as

follows:

(a) The
Texas Board of Criminal Justice by rule
[
executive

director
] shall adopt a salary career ladder for parole officers.

In adopting the salary career ladder, the Texas Board of Criminal

Justice shall, in consultation with relevant stakeholders, review

the current salary structure and align the salary career ladder

with the future needs of the department.

(a-1) The Texas Board of Criminal Justice may revise the

[
The
] salary career ladder
as needed
[
must base a parole officer's

salary on the officer's classification and years of service with

the department
].

SECTION 82. Section 508.1142, Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

Sec. 508.1142. PAROLE OFFICER MAXIMUM CASELOADS. (a) The

Texas Board of Criminal Justice by rule
[
department
] shall

establish
[
adopt a policy that establishes
] guidelines for a

maximum caseload for
a
[
each
] parole officer [
of:

[
(1)

60 active releasees, if the releasees are not in a

specialized program described by Subdivisions (2)-(6);

[
(2)

35 active releasees, if the releasees are in the

special needs offender program;

[
(3)

35 active releasees, if the releasees are in the

therapeutic community substance abuse aftercare treatment program;

[
(4)

24 active releasees, if the releasees are in the

sex offender program;

[
(5)

20 active releasees, if the releasees are

electronically monitored; and

[
(6)

11 active releasees, if the releasees are in the

super-intensive supervision program
].

(b)
The Texas Board of Criminal Justice:

(1)

shall periodically review the guidelines

established under Subsection (a) to ensure that the guidelines are

achievable and informed by research-supported supervision

practices; and

(2) may revise the guidelines as needed.

(c)

The department shall conduct a job task analysis and

workload study with respect to parole officers before the Texas

Board of Criminal Justice adopts or amends the guidelines under

this section
[
If the department is unable to meet the maximum

caseload guidelines, the department shall submit a report to the

Legislative Budget Board, at the end of each fiscal year in which

the department fails to meet the guidelines, stating the amount of

money needed by the department to meet the guidelines
].

SECTION 83. Subchapter D, Chapter 508, Government Code, is

amended by adding Section 508.1143 to read as follows:

Sec.

508.1143.

REPORT ON PAROLE SUPERVISION APPROACHES AND

MAXIMUM CASELOADS. (a) Not later than December 1, 2026, the

department, in consultation with relevant stakeholders, shall:

(1)

review current parole supervision practices and

caseload approaches; and

(2)

submit a report on proposed parole supervision

practices and caseload approaches, including proposed maximum

caseloads for parole officers, to the Texas Board of Criminal

Justice, the board, the governor, the lieutenant governor, the

speaker of the house of representatives, and each standing

committee of the legislature with primary jurisdiction over the

department.

(b) The report must include:

(1)

an evaluation of the department's practice of

assigning parole supervision caseloads where staffing vacancies

exist to ensure appropriate supervision of all caseloads by a

parole officer; and

(2)

the results of any department pilot project

assessing changes to parole officer supervision practices and

caseload approaches.

(c)

A pilot project assessing supervision practices and

caseload approach changes described by Subsection (b)(2) may not be

implemented statewide before submission of the report required by

Subsection (a)(2).

(d) This section expires September 1, 2027.

SECTION 84. Section 508.117(e), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(e) Before an inmate is released from the institutional

division on parole or to mandatory supervision, the
parole
[
pardons

and paroles
] division shall give notice of the release to a person

entitled to notification of parole consideration for the inmate

under Subsection (a) or (b).

SECTION 85. Section 508.146, Government Code, is amended by

amending Subsections (a), (b), (d), (e), and (f) and adding

Subsections (a-1), (g), (h), (i), and (j) to read as follows:

(a)
Subject to Subsection (b), an
[
An
] inmate
,
other than an

inmate who is serving a sentence of death or life without parole
or

an inmate who is not a citizen of the United States, as defined by

federal law,
may be released on medically recommended intensive

supervision on a date designated by a parole panel described by

Subsection (e)[
, except that an inmate with an instant offense that

is an offense described in Article 42A.054, Code of Criminal

Procedure, or an inmate who has a reportable conviction or

adjudication under Chapter 62, Code of Criminal Procedure, may only

be considered if a medical condition of terminal illness or

long-term care has been diagnosed by a physician,
] if:

(1) the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with

Medical or Mental Impairments, in cooperation with the Correctional

Managed Health Care Committee, identifies the inmate as [
being
]:

(A)
being
[
a person who is
] elderly
, regardless

of whether the inmate has a condition described in Paragraphs

(B)-(H);

(B) being
[
or
] terminally ill
;

(C) having
[
,
] a [
person with
] mental illness
;

(D) having
[
,
] an intellectual disability[
,
] or a

physical disability
;

(E) having
[
, or a person who has
] a condition

requiring long-term care[
, if the inmate is an inmate with an

instant offense that is described in Article 42A.054, Code of

Criminal Procedure
]; [
or
]

(F) being
[
(B)
] in a persistent vegetative state
;

(G) having
[
or being a person with
] an organic

brain syndrome with significant to total mobility impairment
; or

(H)

having another eligible medical condition as

prescribed by board rule
[
, if the inmate is an inmate who has a

reportable conviction or adjudication under Chapter 62, Code of

Criminal Procedure
];

(2) the parole panel determines that, based on the

inmate's condition and a medical evaluation, the inmate does not

constitute a threat to public safety; and

(3)
the inmate's medically recommended intensive

supervision plan under Subsection (a-1) is approved by the Texas

Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental

Impairments.

(a-1) The
[
the
] Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with

Medical or Mental Impairments, in cooperation with the [
pardons and

paroles
] division,
shall prepare
[
has prepared
] for
an
[
the
] inmate

who is approved for release under Subsection (a)
a medically

recommended intensive supervision plan that requires the inmate to

submit to electronic monitoring, places the inmate on

super-intensive supervision, or otherwise ensures appropriate

supervision of the inmate.

(b)
In addition to the requirements of Subsection (a), the

following inmates may be released on medically recommended

intensive supervision under that subsection only if the inmates are

identified under Subsection (a)(1) as:

(1)

having a condition described by Subsection

(a)(1)(B) or (E), if the inmate has an instant offense that is

described in Article 42A.054, Code of Criminal Procedure; or

(2)

being in or having a condition described by

Subsection (a)(1)(F) or (G), if the inmate has a reportable

conviction or adjudication under Chapter 62, Code of Criminal

Procedure
[
An inmate may be released on medically recommended

intensive supervision only if the inmate's medically recommended

intensive supervision plan under Subsection (a)(3) is approved by

the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical or Mental

Impairments
].

(d) The Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with Medical

or Mental Impairments
may
[
and the Texas Department of Human

Services shall jointly
] request proposals from public or private

vendors to provide under contract services for inmates released on

medically recommended intensive supervision. A request for

proposals under this subsection may require that the services be

provided in a medical care facility located in an urban area. For

the purposes of this subsection, "urban area" means the area in this

state within a metropolitan statistical area, according to the

standards of the United States Bureau of the Census.

(e)
Parole
[
Only parole
] panels composed of
board members

and parole commissioners
[
the presiding officer of the board and

two members
] appointed to the panel by the presiding officer may

make determinations regarding the release of inmates on medically

recommended intensive supervision under Subsection (a) or of

inmates released pending deportation
under Subsection (f)
. If the

Texas
Correctional Office
[
Council
] on Offenders with
Medical or

Mental Impairments identifies an inmate as a candidate for release

under the guidelines established by Subsection (a)(1),
(b), or

(f)(1), as applicable,
the
office
[
council
] shall present to a

parole panel described by this subsection relevant information

concerning the inmate and the inmate's potential for release under

this section.

(f) An inmate who is not a citizen of the United States, as

defined by federal law, who is not under a sentence of death or life

without parole, and who does not have a reportable conviction or

adjudication under Chapter 62, Code of Criminal Procedure, or an

instant offense described in Article 42A.054, Code of Criminal

Procedure, may be released to immigration authorities pending

deportation on a date designated by a parole panel described by

Subsection (e) if
:

(1)

the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with

Medical or Mental Impairments, in cooperation with the Correctional

Managed Health Care Committee, identifies the inmate as being in or

having a condition described by Subsection (a)(1); and

(2)
the parole panel determines that on release the

inmate would be deported to another country and that the inmate does

not constitute a threat to public safety in the other country or

this country and is unlikely to reenter this country illegally.

(g)

The board shall adopt rules to administer this section.

The rules must:

(1)

specify the procedures for evaluating the

prognosis of inmates who are eligible for medically recommended

intensive supervision under Subsection (a) because of a qualifying

medical condition;

(2)

specify the factors, other than an inmate's

condition, that are relevant or statutorily required to release an

inmate on medically recommended intensive supervision; and

(3)

define what constitutes a threat to public safety

for purposes of Subsections (a)(2) and (f) and specify the factors

that a parole panel described by Subsection (e) must consider when

determining whether an inmate constitutes a threat to public

safety.

(h) The procedures described by Subsection (g)(1) must:

(1)

require a review of the inmate's condition by at

least one health care practitioner; and

(2)

require each health care practitioner who reviews

an inmate's condition as described by Subdivision (1) to provide

the parole panel described by Subsection (e), before the panel

makes a final determination under this section, a written report on

the inmate's condition that:

(A)

is in plain language that is understandable

by a nonmedical professional;

(B)

specifically describes how the inmate's

condition and treatment for the condition will affect the inmate's

cognitive and physical abilities and limitations; and

(C)

contains other information as required by the

board.

(i)

The board may consult with other relevant entities for

purposes of establishing information required in the report under

Subsection (h)(2)(C) including:

(1) the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee;

(2) the division;

(3)

the Texas Correctional Office on Offenders with

Medical or Mental Impairments;

(4)

the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center;

and

(5)

The University of Texas Medical Branch at

Galveston.

(j)

Information regarding the identity of a health care

practitioner providing a report described by Subsection (h)(2),

other than information relating to the practitioner's

specialization, is excepted from required disclosure under Chapter

552.

The board may release the information or redact or otherwise

withhold the information from disclosure under Chapter 552.

SECTION 86. Section 508.152, Government Code, is amended by

adding Subsection (b-3) to read as follows:

(b-3)

For purposes of Subsection (b-1)(1), an inmate's

individual treatment plan must include a comprehensive list, in

plain language, of the inmate's program participation that:

(1) includes:

(A) state-funded programs;

(B) intensive volunteer programs; and

(C) program enrollment and completion dates; and

(2)

distinguishes between evidence-based programs and

correctional elective programs and activities that are

non-evidence based or non-evidence informed.

SECTION 87. Subchapter E, Chapter 508, Government Code, is

amended by adding Sections 508.1521 and 508.158 to read as follows:

Sec.

508.1521.

REQUIRED INDIVIDUAL TREATMENT PLAN PROGRAMS

AND PAROLE-VOTED PROGRAMS.

(a) In this section:

(1)

"Parole-voted program" means a program or class

that the board intends to require an inmate to complete before

releasing the inmate on parole or to mandatory supervision.

(2)

"Required individual treatment plan program"

means a program or class that is required to be included in an

inmate's individual treatment plan under Section 508.152 other than

a parole-voted program required under Section 508.152(c).

(b)

The department, the board, and the Windham School

District shall:

(1)

develop evidence-based program criteria specific

to required individual treatment plan programs and parole-voted

programs to be used in evaluating and assessing those programs;

(2)

develop and maintain a required individual

treatment plan programs list and a parole-voted programs list,

provided that a non-evidence-based or non-evidence-informed

program may not be included on either list;

(3) develop procedures for:

(A)

evaluating programs to be added to the

required individual treatment plan programs list or the

parole-voted programs list;

(B)

assessing current required individual

treatment plan programs and parole-voted programs; and

(C)

removing programs that do not meet the

criteria developed under Subdivision (1) from the lists of required

individual treatment plan programs and parole-voted programs; and

(4)

coordinate on required individual treatment plan

and parole-voted programming options through regular meetings.

(c)

In developing and maintaining the required individual

treatment plan programs list, the department and the Windham School

District have joint authority to decide which programs are included

on the required individual treatment plan programs list.

(d)

In developing and maintaining the parole-voted programs

list, the department and the Windham School District shall present

programming options and program evaluation results to the board,

provided that the board has the sole authority to decide which

programs are included on the parole-voted programs list.

(e) The department shall:

(1)

collect and analyze parole-voted program data on a

rolling basis, including:

(A)

the number of inmates waiting for placement

into a program;

(B)

the waitlist times for placement into a

program;

(C)

the reasons for program placement delays,

other than delays due to a program start date specified by the

board;

(D)

vote revision requests related to program

ineligibility, placement delays, and other factors that may affect

parole release timelines; and

(E)

the number of inmates unable to complete

parole-voted programs before the earliest date on which the inmates

would have been eligible to be released following program

completion;

(2) use the data described by Subdivision (1) to:

(A)

calculate parole-voted program waitlist

times;

(B)

track and reduce parole-voted program

enrollment timelines; and

(C)

work to eliminate parole-voted program

placement delays; and

(3)

include the data and analysis described by

Subdivision (1) in the strategic plan required under Section

501.104.

(f)

The department shall prioritize the placement of

inmates into parole-voted programs, ensure parole-voted program

capacity meets programming needs, and expand parole-voted program

access in accordance with the strategic plan required under Section

501.104.

Sec.

508.158.

SPECIAL CONDITIONS WORK GROUP. (a) The board

and department shall jointly establish a work group consisting of

board members and parole commissioners who actively serve on a

parole panel and staff representatives from the division to assess

the impact and effectiveness of special conditions.

(b) The work group shall:

(1) discuss the efficacy of special conditions;

(2)

assess the continuing need for the use of specific

special conditions; and

(3)

identify potential modifications to special

conditions for the board to consider adopting.

(c)

In discussing the efficacy of special conditions under

Subsection (b), the work group shall solicit input from parole

officers and other relevant parties.

(d) The work group shall meet annually.

SECTION 88. Subchapter F, Chapter 508, Government Code, is

amended by adding Section 508.1831 to read as follows:

Sec.

508.1831.

POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION REIMBURSEMENT

PROGRAM. (a) In this section, "program" means the program

established under this section.

(b)

From money appropriated to the department for the

purpose, the department shall establish and administer a

postsecondary education reimbursement program to provide for the

payment of postsecondary education tuition and fees for enrollment

in courses by eligible inmates.

(c)

An inmate participating in the program and enrolled in

postsecondary education courses during confinement shall reimburse

the department for the costs of the tuition and fees paid on the

inmate's behalf.

(d)

The department may not charge interest for the repayment

of costs under this section.

(e)

A parole panel may require as a condition of parole or

mandatory supervision that a releasee who had the costs of tuition

and fees paid through the program reimburse the department for

those costs.

SECTION 89. Section 508.324, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 508.324. VICTIM-OFFENDER MEDIATION. If the [
pardons

and paroles
] division receives notice from the victim services

office of the department that a victim of the defendant, or the

victim's guardian or close relative, wishes to participate in

victim-offender mediation with a person released on parole or to

mandatory supervision, the division shall cooperate and assist the

person if the person chooses to participate in the mediation

program provided by the office. The [
pardons and paroles
] division

may not require the defendant to participate and may not reward the

person for participation by modifying conditions of release or the

person's level of supervision or by granting any other benefit to

the person.

SECTION 90. Section 509.004(b), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(b) The division shall develop an automated tracking system

that:

(1) is capable of receiving tracking data from

community supervision and corrections departments' caseload

management and accounting systems;

(2) is capable of tracking the defendant and the

sentencing event at which the defendant was placed on community

supervision by name, arrest charge code, and incident number;

(3) provides the division with the statistical data it

needs to support budget requests and satisfy requests for

information; and

(4) is compatible with the requirements of Chapter 66,

Code of Criminal Procedure, and the information systems used by the

institutional division and the
parole
[
pardons and paroles
]

division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

SECTION 91. Section 509.005, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 509.005. INSPECTIONS; AUDITS; EVALUATIONS. The

community justice assistance division shall from time to time

inspect and evaluate and the
office of the independent auditor

[
internal audit division
] may at any reasonable time conduct an

audit of the financial, program compliance, or performance records

of a department to determine:

(1) compliance with the division's rules and

standards;

(2) economical and efficient use of resources;

(3) accomplishment of goals and objectives;

(4) reliability and integrity of information; and

(5) safeguarding of assets.

SECTION 92. Section 511.017, Government Code, is amended to

read as follows:

Sec. 511.017. DUTIES RELATED TO STATE JAIL FELONY

FACILITIES. (a) In this section
, "state
[
:

[
(1)

"State jail division" means the state jail

division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

[
(2) "State
] jail felony facility" means a state jail

felony facility authorized by Subchapter A, Chapter 507.

(b) The commission shall provide the
Texas Department of

Criminal Justice
[
state jail division
] with consultation and

technical assistance relating to the operation and construction of

state jail felony facilities.

SECTION 93. Section 659.015(k), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(k) Compensatory time off to which an employee of the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice is entitled under Subsection (f)
:

(1)
must be taken during the 24-month period following

the end of the workweek in which the compensatory time was accrued
;

and

(2)

if not taken during the period described by

Subdivision (1), shall be credited to the employee's accumulated

vacation leave for purposes of Chapter 661
[
or it lapses
].

SECTION 94. Section 661.152(b), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(b) The amount of vacation accrues
in accordance with this

subchapter and Section 659.015(k)
and may be taken in accordance

with this subchapter.

SECTION 95. Section 811.001(8), Government Code, is amended

to read as follows:

(8) "Custodial officer" means a member of the

retirement system who is employed by the Board of Pardons and

Paroles or the Texas Department of Criminal Justice as a parole

officer or caseworker or who is employed by [
the correctional

institutions division of
] the Texas Department of Criminal Justice

and certified by the department as having a normal job assignment

that requires frequent or infrequent regularly planned contact

with, and in close proximity to, inmates or defendants of the

department
[
correctional institutions division
] without the

protection of bars, doors, security screens, or similar devices and

includes assignments normally involving supervision or the

potential for supervision of inmates in inmate housing areas,

educational or recreational facilities, industrial shops,

kitchens, laundries, medical areas, agricultural shops or fields,

or in other areas on or away from property of the department. The

term includes a member who transfers from the Texas Department of

Criminal Justice to the managed health care unit of The University

of Texas Medical Branch or the Texas Tech University Health

Sciences Center pursuant to Section 9.01, Chapter 238, Acts of the

73rd Legislature,
Regular Session,
1993, elects at the time of

transfer to retain membership in the retirement system, and is

certified by the managed health care unit or the health sciences

center as having a normal job assignment described by this

subdivision.

SECTION 96. Sections 614.002(a) and (e), Health and Safety

Code, are amended to read as follows:

(a) The Advisory Committee to the Texas Board of Criminal

Justice on Offenders with Medical or Mental Impairments is composed

of
27
[
28
] members.

(e) The executive head of each of the following agencies,

divisions of agencies, or associations, or that person's designated

representative, shall serve as a member of the committee:

(1) the correctional institutions division of the

Texas Department of Criminal Justice;

(2) the Department of State Health Services;

(3) the parole division of the Texas Department of

Criminal Justice;

(4) the community justice assistance division of the

Texas Department of Criminal Justice;

(5) the Texas Juvenile Justice Department;

(6) the
Texas Workforce Commission
[
Department of

Assistive and Rehabilitative Services
];

(7) the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee;

(8) Mental Health America of Texas;

(9) the Board of Pardons and Paroles;

(10) the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement;

(11) the Texas Council of Community Centers;

(12) the Commission on Jail Standards;

(13) the Texas Council for Developmental

Disabilities;

(14) the Arc of Texas;

(15) the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Texas;

(16) the
Texas Veterans Commission
[
Parent

Association for the Retarded of Texas, Inc.
];
and

(17) the Health and Human Services Commission[
; and

[
(18)

the Department of Aging and Disability

Services
].

SECTION 97. Section 614.009, Health and Safety Code, is

amended to read as follows:

Sec. 614.009. BIENNIAL REPORT. Not later than
December

[
February
] 1 of each
even-numbered
[
odd-numbered
] year, the office

shall present to the board and file with the governor, lieutenant

governor, and speaker of the house of representatives a report

giving the details of the office's activities during the preceding

biennium. The report must include:

(1) an evaluation of any demonstration project

undertaken by the office;

(2) an evaluation of the progress made by the office

toward developing a plan for meeting the treatment, rehabilitative,

and educational needs of offenders with special needs;

(3)
information on the provision of services under

Section 614.021 to wrongfully imprisoned persons;

(4)
recommendations of the office made in accordance

with Section 614.007(5);

(5)
[
(4)
] an evaluation of the development and

implementation of the continuity of care and service programs

established under Sections 614.013, 614.014, 614.015, 614.016, and

614.018, changes in rules, policies, or procedures relating to the

programs, future plans for the programs, and any recommendations

for legislation; and

(6)
[
(5)
] any other recommendations that the office

considers appropriate.

SECTION 98. Section 614.013(b), Health and Safety Code, is

amended to read as follows:

(b) The memorandum of understanding must establish methods

for:

(1) identifying offenders with mental impairments in

the criminal justice system and collecting and reporting prevalence

rate data to the office;

(2) developing interagency rules, policies,

procedures, and standards for the coordination of care of and the

exchange of information on offenders with mental impairments by

local and state criminal justice agencies, the Department of State

Health Services and the
Health and Human Services Commission

[
Department of Aging and Disability Services
], local mental health

or intellectual and developmental disability authorities, the

Commission on Jail Standards, and local jails;

(3) identifying the services needed by offenders with

mental impairments to reenter the community successfully; and

(4) establishing a process to report implementation

activities to the office.

SECTION 99. Section 614.014, Health and Safety Code, is

amended to read as follows:

Sec. 614.014. CONTINUITY OF CARE FOR ELDERLY OFFENDERS.

(a) The Texas Department of Criminal Justice
, the Texas Workforce

Commission,
and the executive commissioner by rule shall adopt a

memorandum of understanding that establishes the respective

responsibilities of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, the

Department of State Health Services, the
Health and Human Services

Commission
[
Department of Aging and Disability Services
], and the

Texas Workforce Commission
[
Department of Assistive and

Rehabilitative Services
] to institute a continuity of care and

service program for elderly offenders in the criminal justice

system. The office shall coordinate and monitor the development

and implementation of the memorandum of understanding.

(b) The memorandum of understanding must establish methods

for:

(1) identifying elderly offenders in the criminal

justice system;

(2) developing interagency rules, policies, and

procedures for the coordination of care of and the exchange of

information on elderly offenders by local and state criminal

justice agencies, the Department of State Health Services, the

Health and Human Services Commission
[
Department of Aging and

Disability Services
], and the
Texas Workforce Commission

[
Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services
]; and

(3) identifying the services needed by elderly

offenders to reenter the community successfully.

(c) The Texas Department of Criminal Justice, the

Department of State Health Services, the
Health and Human Services

Commission
[
Department of Aging and Disability Services
], and the

Texas Workforce Commission
[
Department of Assistive and

Rehabilitative Services
] shall:

(1) operate the continuity of care and service program

for elderly offenders in the criminal justice system with funds

appropriated for that purpose; and

(2) actively seek federal grants or funds to operate

and expand the program.

SECTION 100. Section 614.015, Health and Safety Code, is

amended to read as follows:

Sec. 614.015. CONTINUITY OF CARE FOR OFFENDERS WITH

PHYSICAL DISABILITIES, TERMINAL ILLNESSES, OR SIGNIFICANT

ILLNESSES. (a) The Texas Department of Criminal Justice
, the Texas

Workforce Commission,
and the executive commissioner by rule shall

adopt a memorandum of understanding that establishes the respective

responsibilities of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, the

Texas Workforce Commission
[
Department of Assistive and

Rehabilitative Services
], the Department of State Health Services,

and the
Health and Human Services Commission
[
Department of Aging

and Disability Services
] to institute a continuity of care and

service program for offenders in the criminal justice system who

are persons with physical disabilities, terminal illnesses, or

significant illnesses. The council shall coordinate and monitor

the development and implementation of the memorandum of

understanding.

(b) The memorandum of understanding must establish methods

for:

(1) identifying offenders in the criminal justice

system who are persons with physical disabilities, terminal

illnesses, or significant illnesses;

(2) developing interagency rules, policies, and

procedures for the coordination of care of and the exchange of

information on offenders who are persons with physical

disabilities, terminal illnesses, or significant illnesses by

local and state criminal justice agencies, the Texas Department of

Criminal Justice, the
Texas Workforce Commission
[
Department of

Assistive and Rehabilitative Services
], the Department of State

Health Services, and the
Health and Human Services Commission

[
Department of Aging and Disability Services
]; and

(3) identifying the services needed by offenders who

are persons with physical disabilities, terminal illnesses, or

significant illnesses to reenter the community successfully.

(c) The Texas Department of Criminal Justice, the
Texas

Workforce Commission
[
Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative

Services
], the Department of State Health Services, and the
Health

and Human Services Commission
[
Department of Aging and Disability

Services
] shall:

(1) operate, with funds appropriated for that purpose,

the continuity of care and service program for offenders in the

criminal justice system who are persons with physical disabilities,

terminal illnesses, or significant illnesses; and

(2) actively seek federal grants or funds to operate

and expand the program.

SECTION 101. Section 614.017(c)(1), Health and Safety Code,

is amended to read as follows:

(1) "Agency" includes any of the following entities

and individuals, a person with an agency relationship with one of

the following entities or individuals, and a person who contracts

with one or more of the following entities or individuals:

(A) the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and

the Correctional Managed Health Care Committee;

(B) the Board of Pardons and Paroles;

(C) the Department of State Health Services;

(D) the Texas Juvenile Justice Department;

(E) the
Texas Workforce Commission
[
Department

of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services
];

(F) the Texas Education Agency;

(G) the Commission on Jail Standards;

(H) [
the Department of Aging and Disability

Services;

[
(I)
] the Texas School for the Blind and Visually

Impaired;

(I)
[
(J)
] community supervision and corrections

departments and local juvenile probation departments;

(J)
[
(K)
] personal bond pretrial release offices

established under Article 17.42, Code of Criminal Procedure;

(K)
[
(L)
] local jails regulated by the

Commission on Jail Standards;

(L)
[
(M)
] a municipal or county health

department;

(M)
[
(N)
] a hospital district;

(N)
[
(O)
] a judge of this state with jurisdiction

over juvenile or criminal cases;

(O)
[
(P)
] an attorney who is appointed or

retained to represent a special needs offender or a juvenile with a

mental impairment;

(P)
[
(Q)
] the Health and Human Services

Commission;

(Q)
[
(R)
] the Department of Information

Resources;

(R)
[
(S)
] the bureau of identification and

records of the Department of Public Safety, for the sole purpose of

providing real-time, contemporaneous identification of individuals

in the Department of State Health Services client data base; and

(S)
[
(T)
] the Department of Family and

Protective Services.

SECTION 102. Sections 614.018(a) and (b), Health and Safety

Code, are amended to read as follows:

(a) The Texas Juvenile Justice Department, the Department

of Public Safety, the Department of State Health Services, the

Health and Human Services Commission
[
Department of Aging and

Disability Services
], the Department of Family and Protective

Services, the Texas Education Agency, and local juvenile probation

departments shall adopt a memorandum of understanding that

establishes their respective responsibilities to institute a

continuity of care and service program for juveniles with mental

impairments in the juvenile justice system. The Texas Correctional

Office on Offenders with Medical and Mental Impairments shall

coordinate and monitor the development and implementation of the

memorandum of understanding.

(b) The memorandum of understanding must establish methods

for:

(1) identifying juveniles with mental impairments in

the juvenile justice system and collecting and reporting relevant

data to the office;

(2) developing interagency rules, policies, and

procedures for the coordination of care of and the exchange of

information on juveniles with mental impairments who are committed

to or treated, served, or supervised by the Texas Juvenile Justice

Department, the Department of Public Safety, the Department of

State Health Services, the Department of Family and Protective

Services, the
Health and Human Services Commission
[
Department of

Aging and Disability Services
], the Texas Education Agency, local

juvenile probation departments, local mental health or

intellectual and developmental disability authorities, and

independent school districts; and

(3) identifying the services needed by juveniles with

mental impairments in the juvenile justice system.

SECTION 103. Section 841.005, Health and Safety Code, is

amended to read as follows:

Sec. 841.005.
TEXAS BOARD OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE
[
OFFICE OF

STATE COUNSEL FOR OFFENDERS
]. (a)
In this section, "board" means

the Texas Board of Criminal Justice.

(b)
Except as provided by Subsection
(d)
[
(b)
], the
board

[
Office of State Counsel for Offenders
] shall
provide

representation for
[
represent
] an indigent person subject to a

civil commitment proceeding under this chapter.

(c)

In providing representation for indigent persons

described by Subsection (b):

(1)

the board may employ attorneys, support staff, and

any other personnel required to provide the representation;

(2)

personnel employed under Subdivision (1) are

directly responsible to the board in the performance of their

duties; and

(3)

the board shall pay all fees and costs associated

with providing the representation.

(d)
[
(b)
] If for any reason the
board
[
Office of State

Counsel for Offenders
] is unable to
provide representation for

[
represent
] an indigent person described by Subsection
(b)
[
(a)
] at

a civil commitment proceeding under this chapter, the court shall

appoint other counsel to represent the indigent person.

SECTION 104. Section 306.007(b), Labor Code, is amended to

read as follows:

(b) The commission shall adopt a memorandum of

understanding with each of the following agencies that establishes

the respective responsibilities of the commission and the agencies

in providing information described by Subsection (a) to persons

formerly sentenced to the
custody
[
institutional division or the

state jail division
] of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice,

to employers or potential employers of those persons, and to local

workforce development boards:

(1) the Department of State Health Services;

(2) the Texas Department of Housing and Community

Affairs;

(3) the Texas Veterans Commission; and

(4) the Health and Human Services Commission.

SECTION 105. The following provisions are repealed:

(1) Article 66.352(b), Code of Criminal Procedure;

(2) Section 19.0041(c), Education Code;

(3) Section 491.001(a)(8), Government Code;

(4) Section 493.0051, Government Code;

(5) Section 494.011, Government Code;

(6) Section 497.111, Government Code;

(7) Section 499.106, Government Code;

(8) Section 499.107, Government Code;

(9) Section 501.062(c), Government Code;

(10) Section 507.003, Government Code;

(11) Section 507.004, Government Code;

(12) Sections 508.1131(b) and (c), Government Code;

and

(13) Section 614.021(c), Health and Safety Code.

SECTION 106. The change in law made by this Act to Section

492.002, Government Code, does not affect the entitlement of a

member serving on the Texas Board of Criminal Justice before the

effective date of this Act to continue to serve for the remainder of

the member's term. As the terms of members expire, the governor

shall appoint or reappoint members who have the qualifications

required by Section 492.002(a), Government Code, as amended by this

Act.

SECTION 107. (a) Sections 492.0031, 501.140, and 508.0362,

Government Code, as amended by this Act, apply to a member of the

Texas Board of Criminal Justice, the Correctional Managed Health

Care Committee, or the Board of Pardons and Paroles, as applicable,

appointed before, on, or after the effective date of this Act.

(b) A member of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice, the

Correctional Managed Health Care Committee, or the Board of Pardons

and Paroles who, before the effective date of this Act, completed

the training program required by Section 492.0031, 501.140, or

508.0362, Government Code, as that law existed before the effective

date of this Act, is only required to complete additional training

on the subjects added by this Act to the training program required

by Section 492.0031, 501.140, or 508.0362, Government Code, as

applicable. A member described by this subsection may not vote,

deliberate, or be counted as a member in attendance at a meeting of

the applicable board or committee held on or after December 1, 2025,

until the member completes the additional training.

SECTION 108. (a) Section 508.0362, Government Code, as

amended by this Act, applies to a parole commissioner employed by

the Board of Pardons and Paroles before, on, or after the effective

date of this Act.

(b) A parole commissioner who, before the effective date of

this Act, completed the training program required by Section

508.0362, Government Code, as that law existed before the effective

date of this Act, is only required to complete additional training

on the subjects added by this Act to the training program required

by that section. A parole commissioner described by this

subsection may not vote or deliberate on a matter described by

Section 508.0441, Government Code, occurring on or after December

1, 2025, until the member completes the additional training.

SECTION 109. Section 659.015(k), Government Code, as

amended by this Act, applies to compensatory time accrued by an

employee of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice before, on, or

after the effective date of this Act.

SECTION 110. As soon as practicable after the effective

date of this Act:

(1) the Texas Board of Criminal Justice shall adopt

the rules required by Sections 499.101(a), 508.1131, and 508.1142,

Government Code, as amended by this Act; and

(2) the Board of Pardons and Paroles shall adopt the

rules required by Section 508.146(g), Government Code, as added by

this Act.

SECTION 111. (a) Not later than December 1, 2025, the Board

of Pardons and Paroles shall make the training required by Section

508.0421, Government Code, as added by this Act, available to board

members and parole commissioners described by Subsection (a) of

that section.

(b) Notwithstanding Section 508.0421(d), Government Code,

as added by this Act, a board member or parole commissioner to whom

that section applies is not required to complete the training

required by that section until December 1, 2025.

SECTION 112. Not later than December 1, 2026:

(1) the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and the

Windham School District shall develop the strategic plan required

by Section 501.104, Government Code, as added by this Act; and

(2) the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shall

revise each inmate's individual treatment plan as necessary to

conform to the requirements of Section 508.152(b-3), Government

Code, as added by this Act.

SECTION 113. It is the intent of the 89th Legislature,

Regular Session, 2025, that the amendments made by this Act be

harmonized with another Act of the 89th Legislature, Regular

Session, 2025, relating to nonsubstantive additions to and

corrections in enacted codes.

SECTION 114. This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.