HB 2005

Describes when a person is in need of treatment because the person is a danger to self, a danger to others, unable to provide for basic personal needs or has a chronic mental disorder.

Status Chapter Number Assigned
Sponsors Jason Kropf (Democrat) (Chief), Tom Andersen (Democrat) (Chief), Julie Fahey (Democrat), Pam Marsh (Democrat), April Dobson (Democrat), Mark Gamba (Democrat), Sue Rieke Smith (Democrat), Rob Nosse (Democrat), Emerson Levy (Democrat), David Gomberg (Democrat), Hoa Nguyen (Democrat), Dacia Grayber (Democrat), Jules Walters (Democrat), Thuy Tran (Democrat), Ben Bowman (Democrat), Bobby Levy (Republican), Lisa Reynolds (Democrat)
Fiscal impact Budget report issued
Revenue impact No revenue impact
Emergency clause Yes

Bill Text

This bill modifies mental health commitment laws and requires municipalities to permit residential treatment facilities in additional zoning areas.

Original Bill Text

Overview#

Digest: Changes the laws on when people who are mentally ill can be made to get treatment. Changes the laws on what happens to a person charged with a crime who is not fit to go to trial. Changes the laws on some facility siting. (Flesch Readability Score: 80.4). Describes when a person is in need of treatment because the person is a danger to self, a danger to others, unable to provide for basic personal needs or has a chronic mental disorder. Describes the evidence that the court may consider when determining whether a person is in need of treatment because the person is a danger to self, a danger to others, unable to provide for basic personal needs or has a chronic mental disorder. Modifies the diversion from commitment process. Creates a new procedure for determining when a person is incapacitated for purposes of a declaration for mental health treatment. Modifies the declaration for mental health treatment form. Describes when a declaration for mental health treatment obviates the need for involuntary treatment. Modifies provisions regarding the sharing of information regarding certain persons receiving mental health treatment. Includes certain attempted criminal conduct in the types of criminal conduct for which a person may be committed as an extremely dangerous person with mental illness. Directs the Judicial Department to collect and analyze data regarding tribal and state interactions relating to certain involuntary treatment of tribal members. Establishes the Task Force on the Intersection of Tribal and State Forensic Behavioral Health. Establishes maximum periods of commitment and community restoration services for criminal defendants determined to lack fitness to proceed. Establishes procedures for requesting extensions to the maximum periods up to a specified total time period. Sunsets the maximum periods on January 1, 2028. Modifies the process for court determinations on fitness to proceed. Specifies what the court may consider when making the determination and procedures for the hearing on the determination. Directs the court to determine, upon finding a defendant to lack fitness to proceed, whether the defendant may only be discharged to certain secure facilities. Modifies the process by which a committed defendant, determined to no longer require a hospital level of care, is discharged to other placements. Establishes procedures for objecting to proposed placements and court procedures when no placements are identified. Requires local governments to allow, within an urban growth boundary, siting of residential treatment facilities, residential treatment homes or crisis stabilization centers within additional land use zones. Appropriates moneys from the General Fund to the Oregon Health Authority for the Behavioral Health Division for payments made to community mental health programs for civil commitments. Appropriates moneys from the General Fund to the Oregon Public Defense Commission for providing public defense to financially eligible persons in civil commitment proceedings. Declares an emergency, effective on passage.

Public Testimony

Name Organization Position Date
Amanda Dalton OR District Attorneys Association Oppose 2025-06-16
Monique Bochsler Scio Oppose 2025-06-16
Elaine Lavington ROSEBURG Oppose 2025-06-16
David Wall Newberg Oppose 2025-06-16
Cherryl Ramirez Association of OR Community Mental Health Programs Support 2025-06-16
Andrea Avila MyMHAD.org Support 2025-06-17
Tim Dooley Association of Oregon Counties Neutral 2025-06-17
Ben Gurewitz Disability Rights Oregon Oppose 2025-06-17
Michael Goodman Portland Support 2025-06-17
Alvin Klausen Marion County Oppose 2025-06-18

Legislative History

Date Chamber Action
2025-06-12 H First reading. Referred to Speaker's desk.
2025-06-12 H Referred to Addiction and Community Safety Response.
2025-06-16 H Public Hearing held.
2025-06-17 H Work Session held.
2025-06-18 H Recommendation: Do pass with amendments, be printed A-Engrossed, and be referred to Ways and Means.
2025-06-18 H Referred to Ways and Means by order of Speaker.
2025-06-18 H Assigned to Subcommittee On Capital Construction.
2025-06-20 H Work Session held.
2025-06-20 H Returned to Full Committee.
2025-06-20 H Work Session held.
2025-06-23 H Recommendation: Do pass with amendments and be printed B-Engrossed.
2025-06-24 H Second reading.
2025-06-25 H Third reading. Carried by Kropf. Passed.
2025-06-25 S First reading. Referred to President's desk.
2025-06-25 S Referred to Ways and Means.
2025-06-26 S Work Session held.
2025-06-26 S Recommendation: Do pass with amendments to the B-Eng. bill to resolve conflicts. (Printed C-Eng.)
2025-06-26 S (Amendments distributed.)
2025-06-26 S Second reading.
2025-06-26 S Rules suspended. Third reading. Carried by Prozanski. Passed.
2025-06-26 S Vote explanation(s) filed by Gelser Blouin.
2025-06-27 H House concurred in Senate amendments and repassed bill.
2025-06-30 H Speaker signed.
2025-06-30 S President signed.
2025-07-24 H Governor signed.
2025-08-13 H Chapter 559, (2025 Laws): Effective date July 24, 2025.

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