A00065 Summary:
BILL NO | A00065A |
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SAME AS | SAME AS S03938-A |
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SPONSOR | Hevesi |
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COSPNSR | Lavine, Dinowitz, Seawright, Pirozzolo, Peoples-Stokes |
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MLTSPNSR | |
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Add §398-f, Soc Serv L | |
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Directs the office of victim services, in consultation with the office for the prevention of domestic violence, to establish a statewide supervised visitation initiative including culturally sensitive services that provide language access for those who need it and that are affordable for those with limited means to pay; requires the submission of regular assessments and reports. |
A00065 Memo:
Go to topNEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)   BILL NUMBER: A65A SPONSOR: Hevesi
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the social services law, in relation to the establish- ment of a statewide supervised visitation initiative to support safe and structured parenting time   PURPOSE: To establish a statewide supervised visitation initiative to support safe and structured parenting time in New York state   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1 amends the social services law to add a new section 398-f directing the Office of Victim Services, in consultation with the Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence to administer supervised visita- tion services throughout the state and require each county and New York City to submit annual assessments of local needs for such services. Section 2 is the effective date.   JUSTIFICATION: Twenty counties in New York State lack supervised visitation services, a key resource providing safe, supervised contact between children and parents in custody and domestic violence disputes. In a comprehensive report compiled by the Unified Court System's Office of Justice Initi- atives detailed the "serious gap in the availability of programs for professional supervision of visitation." The report found that even in areas that do have supervised visitation programs, the service offerings are so limited as to have length wait-lists and high costs to litigants, as well as limitations on the number of visits they can offer. Families and children have a right to maintain relationships through legal proceedings - especially when Family Court backlogs mean cases can spend months, if not years, in limbo. Cost and limited programming should not be prohibitive to accessing this crucial service. This bill would authorize the Office of Victim Services, in consultation with the Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence, to administer supervised visitation throughout the state. It would require counties and New York City to submit annual reports on the need for such services in their area and require OCFS to report annually to the legislature and governor data regarding each program's success in meeting local need and recommendations for improvement.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2024:A.10521 - Referred to Children and Families S.8661A (Sen. Hoylman-Sigal) - Referred to Finance   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: Requires state budget funding to implement.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after it shall have become a law.