Senate Bill 41, concerning services for people adjudicated incompetent to proceed, passed the Senate on March 28 after the body adopted a committee amendment that allows certain short-term commitments and outpatient competency restoration to reduce the backlog of people waiting in jail for inpatient competency restoration beds.
Sponsor Senator Mobley and committee members said the amendment (adopted as L3 on the floor) is intended to reduce the state’s inpatient wait list by permitting short-term commitments and outpatient restoration in the community when appropriate. “The amendment makes it easier to place people on a short‑term commitment without first requiring an M‑1 hold, and helps reduce the competency backlog of people who are waiting in jail for competency restoration,” a committee explanation said on the floor.
Nut graf: The bill permits the Department of Human Services to continue inpatient care in certain circumstances, enables the Department to contract for permanent supportive housing for people whose charges are dismissed following a finding of incompetence to proceed, and requires collection and sharing of residency and case information with housing and local-affairs divisions to facilitate placement and services.
Floor debate emphasized both the human‑service imperative to restore defendants to competency and the practical need to reduce jailing delays while defendants wait for beds at the state hospital. Supporters said the bill preserves community safety while expanding outpatient restoration where clinically appropriate; no substantive floor opposition was recorded after the L3 amendment was adopted.
Action: The Senate adopted the L3 amendment and passed the bill. The committee of the whole had earlier adopted a clarifying amendment that removed the bill’s fiscal note; the bill proceeds with the amended language.