
ENROLLED
H. B. 3049
(By Delegates Stemple, Mezzatesta, Williams,
Carmichael, Swartzmiller, Louisos and Harrison)
[Passed April 14, 2001; in effect July 1, 2001.]
AN ACT to amend and reenact section one, article two-c, chapter
fifteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine
hundred thirty-one, as amended; and to amend article three,
chapter eighteen-a of said code by adding thereto a new
section, designated section ten, all relating to public
safety; including on the central abuse registry those persons
who have abused, neglected or committed other crimes against
persons who are adults, receiving behavioral health services;
authorizing the state department of education to request
information from the central abuse registry; requiring
fingerprinting and criminal record checks of certain
applicants with state department of education; and use and
disclosure of information obtained from record checks.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section one, article two-c, chapter fifteen of the code
of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended,
be amended and reenacted; and that article three, chapter eighteen-a of said code be amended by adding thereto a new section,
designated section ten, all to read as follows:
CHAPTER 15. PUBLIC SAFETY.
ARTICLE 2C. CENTRAL ABUSE REGISTRY.
§15-2C-1. Definitions.
The following words when used in this article have meanings
ascribed to them in this section, except in those instances where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
(a) "Central abuse registry" or "registry" means the registry
created by this article which shall contain the names of
individuals who have been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor
offense constituting abuse, neglect or misappropriation of the
property of a child or an incapacitated adult or an adult receiving
behavioral health services.
(b) "Child abuse and neglect" or "child abuse or neglect" means
those terms as defined in section three, article one, chapter
forty-nine of this code, and shall include any act with respect to
a child which is a crime against the person pursuant to article
two, chapter sixty-one of this code, any act which is unlawful
pursuant to article eight-d of said chapter sixty-one, and any
offense with respect to a child which is enumerated in section
three of this article.
(c) "Abuse or neglect of an incapacitated adult" means "abuse"
"neglect" and "incapacitated adult" as those terms are defined in
section one, article six, chapter nine, and shall include any act
with respect to an incapacitated adult which is a crime against the person pursuant to article two, chapter sixty-one of this code, and
any offense with respect to an incapacitated adult which is
enumerated in section three of this article.
(d) "Adult receiving behavioral health services" means a person
over the age of eighteen years who is receiving any behavioral
health service from a licensed behavioral health provider or any
behavioral health provider whose services are paid for, in whole or
in part, by medicaid or medicare.
(e) "Conviction" of a felony or a misdemeanor means an
adjudication of guilt by a court or jury following a hearing on the
merits, or entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere.
(f) "Residential care facility" means any facility where a child
or an incapacitated adult or an adult receiving behavioral health
services resides which is subject to registration, licensure or
certification by the department of health and human resources, and
shall include nursing homes, personal care homes, residential board
and care homes, adult family care homes, group homes, legally
unlicensed service providers, residential child care facilities,
family based foster care homes, specialized family care homes and
intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded.
(g) "Misappropriation of property" means any act which is a
crime against property under article three, chapter sixty-one of
this code with respect to a child in a residential care facility or
an incapacitated adult or an adult receiving behavioral health
services in a residential care facility or a child or an
incapacitated adult or an adult receiving behavioral health services who is a recipient of home care services.
(h) "Home care" or "home care services" means services provided
to children or incapacitated adults or adults receiving behavioral
health services in the home through a hospice provider, a community
care provider, a home health agency, through the medicaid waiver
program, or through any person when that service is reimbursable
under the state medicaid program.
(i) "Requester" means the West Virginia department of education,
any residential care facility, any state licensed day care center,
or any provider of home care services or an adult receiving
behavioral health services providing to the central abuse registry
the name of an individual and other information necessary to
identify that individual, and either: (1) Certifying that the
individual is being considered for employment by the requester or
for a contractual relationship with the requester wherein the
individual will provide services to a child or an incapacitated
adult or an adult receiving behavioral health services for
compensation; or (2) certifying that an allegation of abuse,
neglect or misappropriation of property has been made against the
individual.
CHAPTER 18A. SCHOOL PERSONNEL.
ARTICLE 3.TRAINING, CERTIFICATION, LICENSING, PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT.
§18A-3-10.Criminal history check of applicants for licensure
by the state department of education.



Beginning the first day of January, two thousand two, any applicant for an initial license issued by the West Virginia
department of education shall be fingerprinted by the West Virginia
state police in accordance with state board policy in order to
determine the applicant's suitability for licensure. The
fingerprints shall be analyzed by the state police for a state
criminal history record check through the central abuse registry
and then forwarded to the federal bureau of investigation for a
national criminal history record check. Information contained in
either the central abuse registry record or the federal bureau of
investigation record may form the basis for the denial of a
certificate for just cause. The applicant for initial
certification pays for the cost of obtaining the central abuse
registry record and the federal bureau of investigation record.



Upon written consent to the state department by the applicant
and within ninety days of the state fingerprint analysis, the
results of a state analysis may be provided to a county board with
which the applicant is applying for employment without further cost
to the applicant.



Information maintained by the state department or a county
board which was obtained for the purpose of this section is exempt
from the disclosure provisions of chapter twenty-nine-b of this
code. Nothing in this section prohibits disclosure or publication
of information in a statistical or other form which does not
identify the individuals involved or provide personal information.