State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > North-dakota > T25 > T25c11

Download pdf
Loading PDF...


CHAPTER 25-11INTERSTATE MENTAL HEALTH COMPACT25-11-01. Enactment of interstate compact on mental health. The interstate compacton mental health is hereby enacted into law and entered into by this state with all other states<br>legally joined therein in the form substantially as follows:Article I. The party states find that the proper and expeditious treatment of the mentallyill and mentally deficient can be facilitated by cooperative action, to the benefit of the patients,<br>their families, and society as a whole. Further, the party states find that the necessity of and<br>desirability for furnishing such care and treatment bears no primary relation to the residence or<br>citizenship of the patient but that, on the contrary, the controlling factors of community safety and<br>humanitarianism require that facilities and services be made available for all who are in need of<br>them. Consequently, it is the purpose of this compact and of the party states to provide the<br>necessary legal basis for the institutionalization or other appropriate care and treatment of the<br>mentally ill and mentally deficient under a system that recognizes the paramount importance of<br>patient welfare and to establish the responsibilities of the party states in terms of such welfare.Article II. As used in this compact:1.&quot;After-care&quot; means care, treatment, and services provided a patient, as defined<br>herein, on convalescent status or conditional release.2.&quot;Institution&quot; means any hospital or other facility maintained by a party state or<br>political subdivision thereof for the care and treatment of mental illness or mental<br>deficiency.3.&quot;Mental deficiency&quot; means mental deficiency as defined by appropriate clinical<br>authorities to such extent that a person so afflicted is incapable of managing the<br>person's self and affairs, but shall not include mental illness as defined herein.4.&quot;Mental illness&quot; means mental disease to such extent that a person so afflicted<br>requires care and treatment for the person's own welfare, or the welfare of others, or<br>of the community.5.&quot;Patient&quot; means any person subject to or eligible as determined by the laws of the<br>sending state, for institutionalization or other care, treatment, or supervision<br>pursuant to the provisions of this compact.6.&quot;Receiving state&quot; means a party state to which a patient is transported pursuant to<br>the provisions of the compact or to which it is contemplated that a patient may be so<br>sent.7.&quot;Sending state&quot; means a party state from which a patient is transported pursuant to<br>the provisions of the compact or from which it is contemplated that a patient may be<br>so sent.8.&quot;State&quot; means any state, territory, or possession of the United States, the District of<br>Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.Article III.1.Whenever a person physically present in any party state shall be in need of<br>institutionalization by reason of mental illness or mental deficiency, the person shall<br>be eligible for care and treatment in an institution in that state irrespective of the<br>person's residence, settlement, or citizenship qualifications.Page No. 12.The provisions of paragraph 1 of this article to the contrary notwithstanding, any<br>patient may be transferred to an institution in another state whenever there are<br>factors based upon clinical determinations indicating that the care and treatment of<br>said patient would be facilitated or improved thereby. Any such institutionalization<br>may be for the entire period of care and treatment or for any portion or portions<br>thereof.The factors referred to in this paragraph shall include the patient's fullrecord with due regard for the location of the patient's family, character of the illness<br>and probable duration thereof, and such other factors as shall be considered<br>appropriate.3.No state shall be obliged to receive any patient pursuant to the provisions of<br>paragraph 2 of this article unless the sending state has given advance notice of its<br>intention to send the patient; furnished all available medical and other pertinent<br>records concerning the patient; given the qualified medical or other appropriate<br>clinical authorities of the receiving state an opportunity to examine the patient if said<br>authorities so wish; and unless the receiving state shall agree to accept the patient.4.In the event that the laws of the receiving state establish a system of priorities for the<br>admission of patients, an interstate patient under this compact shall receive the<br>same priority as a local patient and shall be taken in the same order and at the same<br>time that the person would be taken if the person was a local patient.5.Pursuant to this compact, the determination as to the suitable place of<br>institutionalization for a patient may be reviewed at any time and such further<br>transfer of the patient may be made as seems likely to be in the best interest of the<br>patient.Article IV.1.Whenever, pursuant to the laws of the state in which a patient is physically present,<br>it shall be determined that the patient should receive after-care or supervision, such<br>care or supervision may be provided in a receiving state. If the medical or other<br>appropriate clinical authorities having responsibility for the care and treatment of the<br>patient in the sending state shall have reason to believe that after-care in another<br>state would be in the best interest of the patient and would not jeopardize the public<br>safety, they shall request the appropriate authorities in the receiving state to<br>investigate the desirability of affording the patient such after-care in said receiving<br>state, and such investigation shall be made with all reasonable speed. The request<br>for investigation shall be accompanied by complete information concerning the<br>patient's intended place of residence and the identity of the person in whose charge<br>it is proposed to place the patient, the complete medical history of the patient, and<br>such other documents as may be pertinent.2.If the medical or other appropriate clinical authorities having responsibility for the<br>care and treatment of the patient in the sending state and the appropriate authorities<br>in the receiving state find that the best interest of the patient would be served<br>thereby, and if the public safety would not be jeopardized thereby, the patient may<br>receive after-care or supervision in the receiving state.3.In supervising, treating, or caring for a patient on after-care pursuant to the terms of<br>this article, a receiving state shall employ the same standards of visitation,<br>examination, care, and treatment that it employs for similar local patients.Article V.Whenever a dangerous or potentially dangerous patient escapes from aninstitution in any party state, that state shall promptly notify all appropriate authorities within and<br>without the jurisdiction of the escape in a manner reasonably calculated to facilitate the speedy<br>apprehension of the escapee. Immediately upon the apprehension and identification of any such<br>dangerous or potentially dangerous patient, that patient shall be detained in the state where<br>found pending disposition in accordance with law.Page No. 2Article VI. The duly accredited officers of any state party to this compact, upon theestablishment of their authority and the identity of the patient, shall be permitted to transport any<br>patient being moved pursuant to this compact through any and all states party to this compact,<br>without interference.Article VII.1.No person shall be deemed a patient of more than one institution at any given time.<br>Completion of transfer of any patient to an institution in a receiving state shall have<br>the effect of making the person a patient of the institution in the receiving state.2.The sending state shall pay all costs of and incidental to the transportation of any<br>patient pursuant to this compact, but any two or more party states may, by making a<br>specific agreement for that purpose, arrange for a different allocation of costs as<br>among themselves.3.No provision of this compact shall be construed to alter or affect any internal<br>relationships among the departments, agencies, and officers of and in the<br>government of a party state, or between a party state and its subdivisions, as to the<br>payment of costs, or responsibilities therefor.4.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to prevent any party state or subdivision<br>thereof from asserting any right against any person, agency, or other entity in regard<br>to costs for which such party state or subdivision thereof may be responsible<br>pursuant to any provision of this compact.5.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to invalidate any reciprocal agreement<br>between a party state and a nonparty state relating to institutionalization, care, or<br>treatment of the mentally ill or mentally deficient, or any statutory authority pursuant<br>to which such agreements may be made.Article VIII.1.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to abridge, diminish, or in any way impair<br>the rights, duties, and responsibilities of any patient's guardian on the guardian's<br>own behalf or in respect of any patient for whom the guardian may serve, except that<br>when the transfer of any patient to another jurisdiction makes advisable the<br>appointment of a supplemental or substitute guardian, any court of competent<br>jurisdiction in the receiving state may make such supplemental or substitute<br>appointment and the court which appointed the previous guardian shall upon being<br>duly advised of the new appointment, and upon the satisfactory completion of such<br>accounting and other acts as such court may by law require, relieve the previous<br>guardian of power and responsibility to whatever extent shall be appropriate in the<br>circumstances; provided, however, that in the case of any patient having settlement<br>in the sending state, the court of competent jurisdiction in the sending state shall<br>have the sole discretion to relieve a guardian appointed by it or continue the<br>guardian's power and responsibility, whichever it shall deem advisable. The court in<br>the receiving state may, in its discretion, confirm or reappoint the person or persons<br>previously serving as guardian in the sending state in lieu of making a supplemental<br>or substitute appointment.2.The term &quot;guardian&quot; as used in paragraph 1 of this article shall include any guardian,<br>trustee, legal committee, conservator, or other person or agency however<br>denominated who is charged by law with power to act for or responsibility for the<br>person or property of a patient.Article IX.Page No. 31.No provision of this compact except article V shall apply to any person<br>institutionalized while under sentence in a penal or correctional institution or while<br>subject to trial on a criminal charge, or whose institutionalization is due to the<br>commission of an offense for which, in the absence of mental illness or mental<br>deficiency, said person would be subject to incarceration in a penal or correctional<br>institution.2.To every extent possible, it shall be the policy of states party to this compact that no<br>patient shall be placed or detained in any prison, jail, or lockup, but such patient<br>shall, with all expedition, be taken to a suitable institutional facility for mental illness<br>or mental deficiency.Article X.1.Each party state shall appoint a &quot;compact administrator&quot; who, on behalf of the<br>person's state, shall act as general coordinator of activities under the compact in the<br>person's state and who shall receive copies of all reports, correspondence, and<br>other documents relating to any patient processed under the compact by the<br>person's state either in the capacity of sending or receiving state. The compact<br>administrator or the compact administrator's duly designated representative shall be<br>the official with whom other party states shall deal in any matter relating to the<br>compact or any patient processed thereunder.2.The compact administrators of the respective party states shall have power to<br>promulgate reasonable rules and regulations to carry out more effectively the terms<br>and provisions of this compact.Article XI. The duly constituted administrative authorities of any two or more party statesmay enter into supplementary agreements for the provision of any service or facility or for the<br>maintenance of any institution on a joint or cooperative basis whenever the states concerned<br>shall find that such agreements will improve services, facilities, or institutional care and treatment<br>in the fields of mental illness or mental deficiency. No such supplementary agreement shall be<br>construed so as to relieve any party state of any obligation which it otherwise would have under<br>other provisions of this compact.Article XII.This compact shall enter into full force and effect as to any state whenenacted by it into law and such state shall thereafter be a party thereto with any and all states<br>legally joining therein.Article XIII.1.A state party to this compact may withdraw therefrom by enacting a statute<br>repealing the same. Such withdrawal shall take effect one year after notice thereof<br>has been communicated officially and in writing to the governors and compact<br>administrators of all other party states. However, the withdrawal of any state shall<br>not change the status of any patient who has been sent to said state or sent out of<br>said state pursuant to the provisions of the compact.2.Withdrawal from any agreement permitted by Article VII-2 as to costs or from any<br>supplementary agreement made pursuant to Article XI shall be in accordance with<br>the terms of such agreement.Article XIV. This compact shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate the purposesthereof. The provisions of this compact shall be severable and if any phrase, clause, sentence,<br>or provision of this compact is declared to be contrary to the constitution of any party state or of<br>the United States or the applicability thereof to any government, agency, person, or circumstance<br>is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of this compact and the applicability thereof to any<br>government, agency, person, or circumstance shall not be affected thereby. If this compact shall<br>be held contrary to the constitution of any state party thereto, the compact shall remain in fullPage No. 4force and effect as to the remaining states and in full force and effect as to the state affected as<br>to all severable matters.25-11-02. Compact administrator - Powers. Pursuant to said compact, the executivedirector of the department of human services must be the compact administrator and who, acting<br>jointly with like officers of other party states, may adopt rules to carry out more effectively the<br>terms of the compact.The compact administrator shall cooperate with all departments,agencies, and officers of and in the government of this state and its subdivisions in facilitating the<br>proper administration of the compact or any supplementary agreement or agreements entered<br>into by this state thereunder.25-11-03. Power to make supplementary agreements - Limitation. The compactadministrator is hereby authorized and empowered to enter into supplementary agreements with<br>appropriate officials of other states pursuant to articles VII and XI of the compact. In the event<br>that such supplementary agreements require or contemplate the use of any institution or facility<br>of this state or require or contemplate the provision of any service by this state, no such<br>agreement may have force or effect until approved by the head of the department or agency<br>under whose jurisdiction said institution or facility is operated or whose department or agency will<br>be charged with the rendering of such service.25-11-04. Discharge of financial obligations. The compact administrator, subject tothe approval of the state treasurer, may make or arrange for any payments necessary to<br>discharge any financial obligations imposed upon this state by the compact or by any<br>supplementary agreement entered into thereunder.25-11-05.Transfer of patients - Approval of court. The compact administrator ishereby directed to consult with the immediate family of any proposed transferee and, in the case<br>of a proposed transferee from an institution in this state to an institution in another party state, to<br>take no final action without approval of the district court which committed the patient, or if such<br>patient was not committed, then without approval of the district court serving Stutsman County.25-11-06. Transmission of copies of chapter. Duly authorized copies of this chaptermust, upon its approval, be transmitted by the secretary of state to the governor of each state,<br>the attorney general and the administrator of general services of the United States, and the<br>council of state governments.Page No. 5Document Outlinechapter 25-11 interstate mental health compact

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > North-dakota > T25 > T25c11

Download pdf
Loading PDF...


CHAPTER 25-11INTERSTATE MENTAL HEALTH COMPACT25-11-01. Enactment of interstate compact on mental health. The interstate compacton mental health is hereby enacted into law and entered into by this state with all other states<br>legally joined therein in the form substantially as follows:Article I. The party states find that the proper and expeditious treatment of the mentallyill and mentally deficient can be facilitated by cooperative action, to the benefit of the patients,<br>their families, and society as a whole. Further, the party states find that the necessity of and<br>desirability for furnishing such care and treatment bears no primary relation to the residence or<br>citizenship of the patient but that, on the contrary, the controlling factors of community safety and<br>humanitarianism require that facilities and services be made available for all who are in need of<br>them. Consequently, it is the purpose of this compact and of the party states to provide the<br>necessary legal basis for the institutionalization or other appropriate care and treatment of the<br>mentally ill and mentally deficient under a system that recognizes the paramount importance of<br>patient welfare and to establish the responsibilities of the party states in terms of such welfare.Article II. As used in this compact:1.&quot;After-care&quot; means care, treatment, and services provided a patient, as defined<br>herein, on convalescent status or conditional release.2.&quot;Institution&quot; means any hospital or other facility maintained by a party state or<br>political subdivision thereof for the care and treatment of mental illness or mental<br>deficiency.3.&quot;Mental deficiency&quot; means mental deficiency as defined by appropriate clinical<br>authorities to such extent that a person so afflicted is incapable of managing the<br>person's self and affairs, but shall not include mental illness as defined herein.4.&quot;Mental illness&quot; means mental disease to such extent that a person so afflicted<br>requires care and treatment for the person's own welfare, or the welfare of others, or<br>of the community.5.&quot;Patient&quot; means any person subject to or eligible as determined by the laws of the<br>sending state, for institutionalization or other care, treatment, or supervision<br>pursuant to the provisions of this compact.6.&quot;Receiving state&quot; means a party state to which a patient is transported pursuant to<br>the provisions of the compact or to which it is contemplated that a patient may be so<br>sent.7.&quot;Sending state&quot; means a party state from which a patient is transported pursuant to<br>the provisions of the compact or from which it is contemplated that a patient may be<br>so sent.8.&quot;State&quot; means any state, territory, or possession of the United States, the District of<br>Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.Article III.1.Whenever a person physically present in any party state shall be in need of<br>institutionalization by reason of mental illness or mental deficiency, the person shall<br>be eligible for care and treatment in an institution in that state irrespective of the<br>person's residence, settlement, or citizenship qualifications.Page No. 12.The provisions of paragraph 1 of this article to the contrary notwithstanding, any<br>patient may be transferred to an institution in another state whenever there are<br>factors based upon clinical determinations indicating that the care and treatment of<br>said patient would be facilitated or improved thereby. Any such institutionalization<br>may be for the entire period of care and treatment or for any portion or portions<br>thereof.The factors referred to in this paragraph shall include the patient's fullrecord with due regard for the location of the patient's family, character of the illness<br>and probable duration thereof, and such other factors as shall be considered<br>appropriate.3.No state shall be obliged to receive any patient pursuant to the provisions of<br>paragraph 2 of this article unless the sending state has given advance notice of its<br>intention to send the patient; furnished all available medical and other pertinent<br>records concerning the patient; given the qualified medical or other appropriate<br>clinical authorities of the receiving state an opportunity to examine the patient if said<br>authorities so wish; and unless the receiving state shall agree to accept the patient.4.In the event that the laws of the receiving state establish a system of priorities for the<br>admission of patients, an interstate patient under this compact shall receive the<br>same priority as a local patient and shall be taken in the same order and at the same<br>time that the person would be taken if the person was a local patient.5.Pursuant to this compact, the determination as to the suitable place of<br>institutionalization for a patient may be reviewed at any time and such further<br>transfer of the patient may be made as seems likely to be in the best interest of the<br>patient.Article IV.1.Whenever, pursuant to the laws of the state in which a patient is physically present,<br>it shall be determined that the patient should receive after-care or supervision, such<br>care or supervision may be provided in a receiving state. If the medical or other<br>appropriate clinical authorities having responsibility for the care and treatment of the<br>patient in the sending state shall have reason to believe that after-care in another<br>state would be in the best interest of the patient and would not jeopardize the public<br>safety, they shall request the appropriate authorities in the receiving state to<br>investigate the desirability of affording the patient such after-care in said receiving<br>state, and such investigation shall be made with all reasonable speed. The request<br>for investigation shall be accompanied by complete information concerning the<br>patient's intended place of residence and the identity of the person in whose charge<br>it is proposed to place the patient, the complete medical history of the patient, and<br>such other documents as may be pertinent.2.If the medical or other appropriate clinical authorities having responsibility for the<br>care and treatment of the patient in the sending state and the appropriate authorities<br>in the receiving state find that the best interest of the patient would be served<br>thereby, and if the public safety would not be jeopardized thereby, the patient may<br>receive after-care or supervision in the receiving state.3.In supervising, treating, or caring for a patient on after-care pursuant to the terms of<br>this article, a receiving state shall employ the same standards of visitation,<br>examination, care, and treatment that it employs for similar local patients.Article V.Whenever a dangerous or potentially dangerous patient escapes from aninstitution in any party state, that state shall promptly notify all appropriate authorities within and<br>without the jurisdiction of the escape in a manner reasonably calculated to facilitate the speedy<br>apprehension of the escapee. Immediately upon the apprehension and identification of any such<br>dangerous or potentially dangerous patient, that patient shall be detained in the state where<br>found pending disposition in accordance with law.Page No. 2Article VI. The duly accredited officers of any state party to this compact, upon theestablishment of their authority and the identity of the patient, shall be permitted to transport any<br>patient being moved pursuant to this compact through any and all states party to this compact,<br>without interference.Article VII.1.No person shall be deemed a patient of more than one institution at any given time.<br>Completion of transfer of any patient to an institution in a receiving state shall have<br>the effect of making the person a patient of the institution in the receiving state.2.The sending state shall pay all costs of and incidental to the transportation of any<br>patient pursuant to this compact, but any two or more party states may, by making a<br>specific agreement for that purpose, arrange for a different allocation of costs as<br>among themselves.3.No provision of this compact shall be construed to alter or affect any internal<br>relationships among the departments, agencies, and officers of and in the<br>government of a party state, or between a party state and its subdivisions, as to the<br>payment of costs, or responsibilities therefor.4.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to prevent any party state or subdivision<br>thereof from asserting any right against any person, agency, or other entity in regard<br>to costs for which such party state or subdivision thereof may be responsible<br>pursuant to any provision of this compact.5.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to invalidate any reciprocal agreement<br>between a party state and a nonparty state relating to institutionalization, care, or<br>treatment of the mentally ill or mentally deficient, or any statutory authority pursuant<br>to which such agreements may be made.Article VIII.1.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to abridge, diminish, or in any way impair<br>the rights, duties, and responsibilities of any patient's guardian on the guardian's<br>own behalf or in respect of any patient for whom the guardian may serve, except that<br>when the transfer of any patient to another jurisdiction makes advisable the<br>appointment of a supplemental or substitute guardian, any court of competent<br>jurisdiction in the receiving state may make such supplemental or substitute<br>appointment and the court which appointed the previous guardian shall upon being<br>duly advised of the new appointment, and upon the satisfactory completion of such<br>accounting and other acts as such court may by law require, relieve the previous<br>guardian of power and responsibility to whatever extent shall be appropriate in the<br>circumstances; provided, however, that in the case of any patient having settlement<br>in the sending state, the court of competent jurisdiction in the sending state shall<br>have the sole discretion to relieve a guardian appointed by it or continue the<br>guardian's power and responsibility, whichever it shall deem advisable. The court in<br>the receiving state may, in its discretion, confirm or reappoint the person or persons<br>previously serving as guardian in the sending state in lieu of making a supplemental<br>or substitute appointment.2.The term &quot;guardian&quot; as used in paragraph 1 of this article shall include any guardian,<br>trustee, legal committee, conservator, or other person or agency however<br>denominated who is charged by law with power to act for or responsibility for the<br>person or property of a patient.Article IX.Page No. 31.No provision of this compact except article V shall apply to any person<br>institutionalized while under sentence in a penal or correctional institution or while<br>subject to trial on a criminal charge, or whose institutionalization is due to the<br>commission of an offense for which, in the absence of mental illness or mental<br>deficiency, said person would be subject to incarceration in a penal or correctional<br>institution.2.To every extent possible, it shall be the policy of states party to this compact that no<br>patient shall be placed or detained in any prison, jail, or lockup, but such patient<br>shall, with all expedition, be taken to a suitable institutional facility for mental illness<br>or mental deficiency.Article X.1.Each party state shall appoint a &quot;compact administrator&quot; who, on behalf of the<br>person's state, shall act as general coordinator of activities under the compact in the<br>person's state and who shall receive copies of all reports, correspondence, and<br>other documents relating to any patient processed under the compact by the<br>person's state either in the capacity of sending or receiving state. The compact<br>administrator or the compact administrator's duly designated representative shall be<br>the official with whom other party states shall deal in any matter relating to the<br>compact or any patient processed thereunder.2.The compact administrators of the respective party states shall have power to<br>promulgate reasonable rules and regulations to carry out more effectively the terms<br>and provisions of this compact.Article XI. The duly constituted administrative authorities of any two or more party statesmay enter into supplementary agreements for the provision of any service or facility or for the<br>maintenance of any institution on a joint or cooperative basis whenever the states concerned<br>shall find that such agreements will improve services, facilities, or institutional care and treatment<br>in the fields of mental illness or mental deficiency. No such supplementary agreement shall be<br>construed so as to relieve any party state of any obligation which it otherwise would have under<br>other provisions of this compact.Article XII.This compact shall enter into full force and effect as to any state whenenacted by it into law and such state shall thereafter be a party thereto with any and all states<br>legally joining therein.Article XIII.1.A state party to this compact may withdraw therefrom by enacting a statute<br>repealing the same. Such withdrawal shall take effect one year after notice thereof<br>has been communicated officially and in writing to the governors and compact<br>administrators of all other party states. However, the withdrawal of any state shall<br>not change the status of any patient who has been sent to said state or sent out of<br>said state pursuant to the provisions of the compact.2.Withdrawal from any agreement permitted by Article VII-2 as to costs or from any<br>supplementary agreement made pursuant to Article XI shall be in accordance with<br>the terms of such agreement.Article XIV. This compact shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate the purposesthereof. The provisions of this compact shall be severable and if any phrase, clause, sentence,<br>or provision of this compact is declared to be contrary to the constitution of any party state or of<br>the United States or the applicability thereof to any government, agency, person, or circumstance<br>is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of this compact and the applicability thereof to any<br>government, agency, person, or circumstance shall not be affected thereby. If this compact shall<br>be held contrary to the constitution of any state party thereto, the compact shall remain in fullPage No. 4force and effect as to the remaining states and in full force and effect as to the state affected as<br>to all severable matters.25-11-02. Compact administrator - Powers. Pursuant to said compact, the executivedirector of the department of human services must be the compact administrator and who, acting<br>jointly with like officers of other party states, may adopt rules to carry out more effectively the<br>terms of the compact.The compact administrator shall cooperate with all departments,agencies, and officers of and in the government of this state and its subdivisions in facilitating the<br>proper administration of the compact or any supplementary agreement or agreements entered<br>into by this state thereunder.25-11-03. Power to make supplementary agreements - Limitation. The compactadministrator is hereby authorized and empowered to enter into supplementary agreements with<br>appropriate officials of other states pursuant to articles VII and XI of the compact. In the event<br>that such supplementary agreements require or contemplate the use of any institution or facility<br>of this state or require or contemplate the provision of any service by this state, no such<br>agreement may have force or effect until approved by the head of the department or agency<br>under whose jurisdiction said institution or facility is operated or whose department or agency will<br>be charged with the rendering of such service.25-11-04. Discharge of financial obligations. The compact administrator, subject tothe approval of the state treasurer, may make or arrange for any payments necessary to<br>discharge any financial obligations imposed upon this state by the compact or by any<br>supplementary agreement entered into thereunder.25-11-05.Transfer of patients - Approval of court. The compact administrator ishereby directed to consult with the immediate family of any proposed transferee and, in the case<br>of a proposed transferee from an institution in this state to an institution in another party state, to<br>take no final action without approval of the district court which committed the patient, or if such<br>patient was not committed, then without approval of the district court serving Stutsman County.25-11-06. Transmission of copies of chapter. Duly authorized copies of this chaptermust, upon its approval, be transmitted by the secretary of state to the governor of each state,<br>the attorney general and the administrator of general services of the United States, and the<br>council of state governments.Page No. 5Document Outlinechapter 25-11 interstate mental health compact

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > North-dakota > T25 > T25c11

Download pdf
Loading PDF...


CHAPTER 25-11INTERSTATE MENTAL HEALTH COMPACT25-11-01. Enactment of interstate compact on mental health. The interstate compacton mental health is hereby enacted into law and entered into by this state with all other states<br>legally joined therein in the form substantially as follows:Article I. The party states find that the proper and expeditious treatment of the mentallyill and mentally deficient can be facilitated by cooperative action, to the benefit of the patients,<br>their families, and society as a whole. Further, the party states find that the necessity of and<br>desirability for furnishing such care and treatment bears no primary relation to the residence or<br>citizenship of the patient but that, on the contrary, the controlling factors of community safety and<br>humanitarianism require that facilities and services be made available for all who are in need of<br>them. Consequently, it is the purpose of this compact and of the party states to provide the<br>necessary legal basis for the institutionalization or other appropriate care and treatment of the<br>mentally ill and mentally deficient under a system that recognizes the paramount importance of<br>patient welfare and to establish the responsibilities of the party states in terms of such welfare.Article II. As used in this compact:1.&quot;After-care&quot; means care, treatment, and services provided a patient, as defined<br>herein, on convalescent status or conditional release.2.&quot;Institution&quot; means any hospital or other facility maintained by a party state or<br>political subdivision thereof for the care and treatment of mental illness or mental<br>deficiency.3.&quot;Mental deficiency&quot; means mental deficiency as defined by appropriate clinical<br>authorities to such extent that a person so afflicted is incapable of managing the<br>person's self and affairs, but shall not include mental illness as defined herein.4.&quot;Mental illness&quot; means mental disease to such extent that a person so afflicted<br>requires care and treatment for the person's own welfare, or the welfare of others, or<br>of the community.5.&quot;Patient&quot; means any person subject to or eligible as determined by the laws of the<br>sending state, for institutionalization or other care, treatment, or supervision<br>pursuant to the provisions of this compact.6.&quot;Receiving state&quot; means a party state to which a patient is transported pursuant to<br>the provisions of the compact or to which it is contemplated that a patient may be so<br>sent.7.&quot;Sending state&quot; means a party state from which a patient is transported pursuant to<br>the provisions of the compact or from which it is contemplated that a patient may be<br>so sent.8.&quot;State&quot; means any state, territory, or possession of the United States, the District of<br>Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.Article III.1.Whenever a person physically present in any party state shall be in need of<br>institutionalization by reason of mental illness or mental deficiency, the person shall<br>be eligible for care and treatment in an institution in that state irrespective of the<br>person's residence, settlement, or citizenship qualifications.Page No. 12.The provisions of paragraph 1 of this article to the contrary notwithstanding, any<br>patient may be transferred to an institution in another state whenever there are<br>factors based upon clinical determinations indicating that the care and treatment of<br>said patient would be facilitated or improved thereby. Any such institutionalization<br>may be for the entire period of care and treatment or for any portion or portions<br>thereof.The factors referred to in this paragraph shall include the patient's fullrecord with due regard for the location of the patient's family, character of the illness<br>and probable duration thereof, and such other factors as shall be considered<br>appropriate.3.No state shall be obliged to receive any patient pursuant to the provisions of<br>paragraph 2 of this article unless the sending state has given advance notice of its<br>intention to send the patient; furnished all available medical and other pertinent<br>records concerning the patient; given the qualified medical or other appropriate<br>clinical authorities of the receiving state an opportunity to examine the patient if said<br>authorities so wish; and unless the receiving state shall agree to accept the patient.4.In the event that the laws of the receiving state establish a system of priorities for the<br>admission of patients, an interstate patient under this compact shall receive the<br>same priority as a local patient and shall be taken in the same order and at the same<br>time that the person would be taken if the person was a local patient.5.Pursuant to this compact, the determination as to the suitable place of<br>institutionalization for a patient may be reviewed at any time and such further<br>transfer of the patient may be made as seems likely to be in the best interest of the<br>patient.Article IV.1.Whenever, pursuant to the laws of the state in which a patient is physically present,<br>it shall be determined that the patient should receive after-care or supervision, such<br>care or supervision may be provided in a receiving state. If the medical or other<br>appropriate clinical authorities having responsibility for the care and treatment of the<br>patient in the sending state shall have reason to believe that after-care in another<br>state would be in the best interest of the patient and would not jeopardize the public<br>safety, they shall request the appropriate authorities in the receiving state to<br>investigate the desirability of affording the patient such after-care in said receiving<br>state, and such investigation shall be made with all reasonable speed. The request<br>for investigation shall be accompanied by complete information concerning the<br>patient's intended place of residence and the identity of the person in whose charge<br>it is proposed to place the patient, the complete medical history of the patient, and<br>such other documents as may be pertinent.2.If the medical or other appropriate clinical authorities having responsibility for the<br>care and treatment of the patient in the sending state and the appropriate authorities<br>in the receiving state find that the best interest of the patient would be served<br>thereby, and if the public safety would not be jeopardized thereby, the patient may<br>receive after-care or supervision in the receiving state.3.In supervising, treating, or caring for a patient on after-care pursuant to the terms of<br>this article, a receiving state shall employ the same standards of visitation,<br>examination, care, and treatment that it employs for similar local patients.Article V.Whenever a dangerous or potentially dangerous patient escapes from aninstitution in any party state, that state shall promptly notify all appropriate authorities within and<br>without the jurisdiction of the escape in a manner reasonably calculated to facilitate the speedy<br>apprehension of the escapee. Immediately upon the apprehension and identification of any such<br>dangerous or potentially dangerous patient, that patient shall be detained in the state where<br>found pending disposition in accordance with law.Page No. 2Article VI. The duly accredited officers of any state party to this compact, upon theestablishment of their authority and the identity of the patient, shall be permitted to transport any<br>patient being moved pursuant to this compact through any and all states party to this compact,<br>without interference.Article VII.1.No person shall be deemed a patient of more than one institution at any given time.<br>Completion of transfer of any patient to an institution in a receiving state shall have<br>the effect of making the person a patient of the institution in the receiving state.2.The sending state shall pay all costs of and incidental to the transportation of any<br>patient pursuant to this compact, but any two or more party states may, by making a<br>specific agreement for that purpose, arrange for a different allocation of costs as<br>among themselves.3.No provision of this compact shall be construed to alter or affect any internal<br>relationships among the departments, agencies, and officers of and in the<br>government of a party state, or between a party state and its subdivisions, as to the<br>payment of costs, or responsibilities therefor.4.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to prevent any party state or subdivision<br>thereof from asserting any right against any person, agency, or other entity in regard<br>to costs for which such party state or subdivision thereof may be responsible<br>pursuant to any provision of this compact.5.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to invalidate any reciprocal agreement<br>between a party state and a nonparty state relating to institutionalization, care, or<br>treatment of the mentally ill or mentally deficient, or any statutory authority pursuant<br>to which such agreements may be made.Article VIII.1.Nothing in this compact shall be construed to abridge, diminish, or in any way impair<br>the rights, duties, and responsibilities of any patient's guardian on the guardian's<br>own behalf or in respect of any patient for whom the guardian may serve, except that<br>when the transfer of any patient to another jurisdiction makes advisable the<br>appointment of a supplemental or substitute guardian, any court of competent<br>jurisdiction in the receiving state may make such supplemental or substitute<br>appointment and the court which appointed the previous guardian shall upon being<br>duly advised of the new appointment, and upon the satisfactory completion of such<br>accounting and other acts as such court may by law require, relieve the previous<br>guardian of power and responsibility to whatever extent shall be appropriate in the<br>circumstances; provided, however, that in the case of any patient having settlement<br>in the sending state, the court of competent jurisdiction in the sending state shall<br>have the sole discretion to relieve a guardian appointed by it or continue the<br>guardian's power and responsibility, whichever it shall deem advisable. The court in<br>the receiving state may, in its discretion, confirm or reappoint the person or persons<br>previously serving as guardian in the sending state in lieu of making a supplemental<br>or substitute appointment.2.The term &quot;guardian&quot; as used in paragraph 1 of this article shall include any guardian,<br>trustee, legal committee, conservator, or other person or agency however<br>denominated who is charged by law with power to act for or responsibility for the<br>person or property of a patient.Article IX.Page No. 31.No provision of this compact except article V shall apply to any person<br>institutionalized while under sentence in a penal or correctional institution or while<br>subject to trial on a criminal charge, or whose institutionalization is due to the<br>commission of an offense for which, in the absence of mental illness or mental<br>deficiency, said person would be subject to incarceration in a penal or correctional<br>institution.2.To every extent possible, it shall be the policy of states party to this compact that no<br>patient shall be placed or detained in any prison, jail, or lockup, but such patient<br>shall, with all expedition, be taken to a suitable institutional facility for mental illness<br>or mental deficiency.Article X.1.Each party state shall appoint a &quot;compact administrator&quot; who, on behalf of the<br>person's state, shall act as general coordinator of activities under the compact in the<br>person's state and who shall receive copies of all reports, correspondence, and<br>other documents relating to any patient processed under the compact by the<br>person's state either in the capacity of sending or receiving state. The compact<br>administrator or the compact administrator's duly designated representative shall be<br>the official with whom other party states shall deal in any matter relating to the<br>compact or any patient processed thereunder.2.The compact administrators of the respective party states shall have power to<br>promulgate reasonable rules and regulations to carry out more effectively the terms<br>and provisions of this compact.Article XI. The duly constituted administrative authorities of any two or more party statesmay enter into supplementary agreements for the provision of any service or facility or for the<br>maintenance of any institution on a joint or cooperative basis whenever the states concerned<br>shall find that such agreements will improve services, facilities, or institutional care and treatment<br>in the fields of mental illness or mental deficiency. No such supplementary agreement shall be<br>construed so as to relieve any party state of any obligation which it otherwise would have under<br>other provisions of this compact.Article XII.This compact shall enter into full force and effect as to any state whenenacted by it into law and such state shall thereafter be a party thereto with any and all states<br>legally joining therein.Article XIII.1.A state party to this compact may withdraw therefrom by enacting a statute<br>repealing the same. Such withdrawal shall take effect one year after notice thereof<br>has been communicated officially and in writing to the governors and compact<br>administrators of all other party states. However, the withdrawal of any state shall<br>not change the status of any patient who has been sent to said state or sent out of<br>said state pursuant to the provisions of the compact.2.Withdrawal from any agreement permitted by Article VII-2 as to costs or from any<br>supplementary agreement made pursuant to Article XI shall be in accordance with<br>the terms of such agreement.Article XIV. This compact shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate the purposesthereof. The provisions of this compact shall be severable and if any phrase, clause, sentence,<br>or provision of this compact is declared to be contrary to the constitution of any party state or of<br>the United States or the applicability thereof to any government, agency, person, or circumstance<br>is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of this compact and the applicability thereof to any<br>government, agency, person, or circumstance shall not be affected thereby. If this compact shall<br>be held contrary to the constitution of any state party thereto, the compact shall remain in fullPage No. 4force and effect as to the remaining states and in full force and effect as to the state affected as<br>to all severable matters.25-11-02. Compact administrator - Powers. Pursuant to said compact, the executivedirector of the department of human services must be the compact administrator and who, acting<br>jointly with like officers of other party states, may adopt rules to carry out more effectively the<br>terms of the compact.The compact administrator shall cooperate with all departments,agencies, and officers of and in the government of this state and its subdivisions in facilitating the<br>proper administration of the compact or any supplementary agreement or agreements entered<br>into by this state thereunder.25-11-03. Power to make supplementary agreements - Limitation. The compactadministrator is hereby authorized and empowered to enter into supplementary agreements with<br>appropriate officials of other states pursuant to articles VII and XI of the compact. In the event<br>that such supplementary agreements require or contemplate the use of any institution or facility<br>of this state or require or contemplate the provision of any service by this state, no such<br>agreement may have force or effect until approved by the head of the department or agency<br>under whose jurisdiction said institution or facility is operated or whose department or agency will<br>be charged with the rendering of such service.25-11-04. Discharge of financial obligations. The compact administrator, subject tothe approval of the state treasurer, may make or arrange for any payments necessary to<br>discharge any financial obligations imposed upon this state by the compact or by any<br>supplementary agreement entered into thereunder.25-11-05.Transfer of patients - Approval of court. The compact administrator ishereby directed to consult with the immediate family of any proposed transferee and, in the case<br>of a proposed transferee from an institution in this state to an institution in another party state, to<br>take no final action without approval of the district court which committed the patient, or if such<br>patient was not committed, then without approval of the district court serving Stutsman County.25-11-06. Transmission of copies of chapter. Duly authorized copies of this chaptermust, upon its approval, be transmitted by the secretary of state to the governor of each state,<br>the attorney general and the administrator of general services of the United States, and the<br>council of state governments.Page No. 5Document Outlinechapter 25-11 interstate mental health compact