HB 1577 — An Act amending the act of June 13, 1967 (P.L.31, No.21), known as the Human Services Code, in children and youth, providing for ensuring safe and humane institutional practices.
Congress · introduced 2025-06-09
Latest action: — Referred to AGING AND YOUTH, July 31, 2025
Sponsors
- Melissa L. Shusterman (D, PA-157) — sponsor · 2025-06-09
- Joseph C. Hohenstein (D, PA-177) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Liz Hanbidge (D, PA-61) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Sean Dougherty (D, PA-172) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Carol Hill-Evans (D, PA-95) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Tarik Khan (D, PA-194) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Dan K. Williams (D, PA-74) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Benjamin V. Sanchez (D, PA-153) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Perry S. Warren (D, PA-31) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (D, PA-129) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- La'Tasha D. Mayes (D, PA-24) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Nikki Rivera (D, PA-96) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Heather Boyd (D, PA-163) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Joe Webster (D, PA-150) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
- Gina H. Curry (D, PA-164) — cosponsor · 2025-06-09
Action timeline
- · house — Referred to CHILDREN AND YOUTH, June 9, 2025
- · house — Reported as committed, June 17, 2025
- · house — First consideration, June 17, 2025
- · house — Re-committed to RULES, June 17, 2025
- · house — Re-reported as committed, July 8, 2025
- · house — Second consideration, with amendments, July 8, 2025
- · house — Re-committed to APPROPRIATIONS, July 8, 2025
- · house — Re-reported as committed, July 9, 2025
- · house — Third consideration and final passage, July 9, 2025 (108-95)
- · senate — In the Senate
- · senate — Referred to AGING AND YOUTH, July 31, 2025
- · house — (Remarks see House Journal Page 1230-1231), July 8, 2025
- · house — (Remarks see House Journal Page 1258-1259), July 9, 2025
Text versions
No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.
Bill text
Printer's No. 1864 · 14,629 characters · source document
Read the full text
PRINTER'S NO. 1864
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA
HOUSE BILL
No. 1577
Session of
2025
INTRODUCED BY SHUSTERMAN, HOHENSTEIN, HANBIDGE, DOUGHERTY, HILL-
EVANS, KHAN, D. WILLIAMS, SANCHEZ, WARREN, CEPEDA-FREYTIZ AND
MAYES, JUNE 6, 2025
REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON CHILDREN AND YOUTH, JUNE 9, 2025
AN ACT
1 Amending the act of June 13, 1967 (P.L.31, No.21), entitled "An
2 act to consolidate, editorially revise, and codify the public
3 welfare laws of the Commonwealth," in children and youth,
4 providing for ensuring safe and humane institutional
5 practices.
6 The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
7 hereby enacts as follows:
8 Section 1. The act of June 13, 1967 (P.L.31, No.21), known
9 as the Human Services Code, is amended by adding a section to
10 read:
11 Section 724.1. Ensuring Safe and Humane Institutional
12 Practices.--(a) The safe and humane care of children in
13 facilities demands that restrictive procedures, including
14 chemical restraints, manual restraints, mechanical restraints,
15 seclusion, exclusion, strip searches and body cavity searches,
16 only be used as measures of last resort to protect a child from
17 behavior that poses a serious and immediate risk of physical
18 harm to self or others.
19 (b) To ensure safe and humane institutional practices:
1 (1) Restrictive procedures, including restrictions on a
2 child's rights, including the right to a quality education, may
3 not be used for punishment, retaliation, administrative
4 convenience, staffing shortages or for any reason other than
5 securing the immediate physical safety of a child.
6 (2) Inappropriate use of restrictive procedures shall be
7 grounds for full investigation, including a criminal
8 investigation, and license revocation.
9 (c) The department shall:
10 (1) Establish standards consistent with the law and
11 regulations of various departments of the Commonwealth for all
12 facilities within this Commonwealth that include a prohibition
13 on:
14 (i) The use of restrictive procedures unless used as
15 measures of last resort to protect a child from behavior that
16 poses a serious and immediate risk of physical harm to the child
17 or others.
18 (ii) The restriction of a child's rights, including the
19 right to privacy, receive mail, make phone calls, have in-person
20 visitation with family members and receive a quality education.
21 (iii) Any and all instances of abuse.
22 (2) Be responsible for the maintenance of safe and humane
23 care at a facility. The department or its representative shall
24 have free and full access to the premises and records of a
25 facility and full opportunity to interrogate or interview any
26 officer, employe or resident of the facility. The department
27 shall make routine announced and unannounced daytime and
28 nighttime inspections of all facilities.
29 (3) Expeditiously review all allegations of unsafe or
30 inhumane care and maintain a public record of confirmed
20250HB1577PN1864 - 2 -
1 instances that have occurred in a facility.
2 (4) Whenever the department, upon inspection, investigation
3 or complaint, finds a facility in violation of law, or that a
4 facility has failed to establish, provide or maintain standards
5 of care required by this section, give immediate written notice
6 of the violation or failure to the officers charged with
7 managing the facility. The following procedure shall apply:
8 (i) The notice shall include a description of the violation
9 or failure, the corrective action needed and a specified time
10 frame for making any necessary corrections.
11 (ii) Upon receipt of the notice, an officer charged with
12 managing the facility shall comply with the direction of the
13 department. If the officer charged with managing the facility
14 fails to comply with the department's direction within the
15 specified time frame, the department may:
16 (A) Revoke the facility's license.
17 (B) Request the Attorney General to institute appropriate
18 legal proceedings to enforce compliance with the direction.
19 (C) Withhold any State money available for the facility
20 until the officer charged with managing the facility complies
21 with the direction.
22 (D) Refer the matter for criminal investigation.
23 (d) The following exceptions apply to this section:
24 (1) A limited period of cool down or time out for a child is
25 not considered solitary confinement if the period conforms to
26 the following:
27 (i) The child's behavior is creating an imminent risk of
28 physical harm to self or others and is for a maximum of three
29 hours, with release of the child as soon as the child has
30 regained self-control.
20250HB1577PN1864 - 3 -
1 (ii) Support staff, including a social worker, is notified
2 and made available to the child to assist the child in calming
3 down.
4 (iii) Staff closely monitors the child during the period and
5 maintains physical proximity.
6 (iv) Restriction beyond three hours is documented and
7 reported to both the department and the Office of Child
8 Advocate.
9 (2) Strip searches and body cavity searches may be conducted
10 only as a last resort and where there is probable cause that the
11 child being searched possesses drugs or a weapon that could not
12 be discovered through less intrusive means and authorization
13 from an individual in the agency overseeing the facility. The
14 following shall apply to searches under this clause:
15 (i) When authorized, strip searches shall be performed by
16 two staff or medical personnel of the same gender as the child
17 in an area that ensures the privacy and dignity of the child.
18 (ii) Body cavity searches may only be performed by outside
19 medical providers.
20 (iii) To the degree possible, and only when searches are
21 necessary, a facility shall rely on alternatives such as wands
22 or metal detectors.
23 (iv) The use of a strip search or body cavity search shall
24 be documented and reported to the department. Documentation
25 shall include:
26 (A) The probable cause that the child being searched
27 possesses drugs or a weapon that could not be discovered through
28 less intrusive means.
29 (B) The authorization for the search.
30 (C) The names and positions of the individuals conducting
20250HB1577PN1864 - 4 -
1 the search.
2 (3) Staff may use manual restraints on a child when the
3 child's behavior creates an imminent risk of serious physical
4 harm to self or others and shall be conducted in accordance with
5 the following:
6 (i) A facility shall ensure that manual restraints adhere to
7 a model approved in advance by the department.
8 (ii) Staff shall terminate manual restraints immediately
9 when the child's behavior no longer poses a risk of serious
10 physical harm to self or others.
11 (iii) Staff shall observe and document the child's physical
12 and emotional condition every ten minutes while manual
13 restraints are being applied to the child.
14 (iv) In accordance with 55 Pa. Code § 3800.211(c) (relating
15 to manual restraints), prone position manual restraints are not
16 used.
17 (e) A facility shall have the following duties:
18 (1) Use a program model that incorporates evidence-based and
19 evidence-informed practices. Staff shall deliver the practices
20 with the training and education required to maintain fidelity to
21 the program model or practices.
22 (2) Ensure that staff receive regular training on cultural
23 competence, evidence-based models for recidivism reduction and
24 the provisions of 55 Pa. Code Ch. 3800 (relating to child
25 residential and day treatment facilities).
26 (3) Maintain a discipline plan approved by the department as
27 part of the program model used under clause (1). Facilities
28 shall ensure that the discipline plan focuses on the use of
29 incentives rather than punishment or sanctions.
30 (4) Ensure and facilitate access to a quality education.
20250HB1577PN1864 - 5 -
1 (f) The department shall ensure that children and their
2 families and guardians understand how to report a grievance or
3 any instances of unsafe or inhumane care, in written or oral
4 form, formally or informally, or anonymously, without fear of
5 retaliation. The following shall apply:
6 (1) Assistance to file a grievance shall be available upon
7 request by a child.
8 (2) An adult with whom a child seeks assistance shall be
9 permitted to provide assistance and, notwithstanding mandated
10 reporting, shall keep confidential any information shared by the
11 child for purposes of filing the grievance.
12 (3) A facility shall accept any grievance, whether formal or
13 informal, as notice of the child's concerns and may not require
14 specific forms or processes.
15 (g) Beginning not later than ninety days after the effective
16 date of this subsection, the department shall prepare and
17 publish a monthly public report detailing enrollment in
18 educational programming, use of seclusion, use of restraints and
19 invasive searches involving children committed by order of court
20 to a facility operated under the direction or supervision of the
21 court or other public authority. The following shall apply:
22 (1) Each quarterly report shall include, at minimum, the
23 following disaggregated data:
24 (i) Number of children subjected to seclusion.
25 (ii) Number of children subjected to seclusion more than
26 once.
27 (iii) Number of children secluded for more than three hours
28 (iv) Number of children secluded for more than three hours
29 on more than one occasion.
30 (v) Number of children restrained physically or
20250HB1577PN1864 - 6 -
1 mechanically.
2 (vi) Number of children subjected to strip searches.
3 (vii) Number of children subjected to cavity searches.
4 (viii) Number of children educated in public school, on-
5 grounds school or cyber program.
6 (2) All data under paragraph (1) shall be disaggregated by
7 the following:
8 (i) Race.
9 (ii) Gender.
10 (iii) Ethnicity.
11 (iv) Sending jurisdiction.
12 (v) Disability status, including a diagnoses under an
13 Individualized Education Program, 29 U.S.C. § 794 (relating
14 nondiscrimination under Federal grants and programs) or the
15 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th
16 Edition: DSM-5, 2013, published by the American Psychiatric
17 Association.
18 (3) Each quarterly report shall be published on the
19 department's publicly accessible dashboard by the twentieth day
20 of the month following the reporting quarter and shall be
21 available in machine-readable and open data formats.
22 (h) As used in this section, the following words and phrases
23 shall have the meanings given to them in this subsection unless
24 the context clearly indicates otherwise:
25 "Chemical restraint" means a drug used to control acute,
26 episodic behavior that restricts the movement or function of a
27 child. The term does not include a drug ordered by a licensed
28 physician as part of ongoing medical treatment or as
29 pretreatment prior to a medical or dental examination or
30 treatment.
20250HB1577PN1864 - 7 -
1 "Exclusion" means the removal of a child from the child's
2 immediate environment and restricting the child alone to a room
3 or area, even if the door is unlocked. The term does not include
4 a situation in which a staff person remains in the exclusion
5 area with the child.
6 "Facility" means a setting, including a children's
7 institution, youth development center, camp or other facility at
8 which a child is held as a result of the child's alleged or
9 actual dependency or delinquency under 42 Pa.C.S. Ch. 63
10 (relating to juvenile matters).
11 "Manual restraint" means a physical hands-on technique that
12 lasts more than one minute and that restricts the movement or
13 function of a child or portion of a child's body. The term does
14 not include a manual assist of any duration for a child during
15 which the child does not physically resist or a therapeutic hold
16 for a child who is eight years of age or younger for less than
17 ten minutes during which the child does not physically resist.
18 "Mechanical restraint" as follows:
19 (1) A device that restricts the movement or function of a
20 child or portion of a child's body.
21 (2) The term includes handcuffs, anklets, wristlets,
22 camisoles, helmets with fasteners, muffs and mitts with
23 fasteners, restraints to prevent exiting a hospital bed
24 unassisted, waist straps, head straps, papoose boards,
25 restraining sheets and similar devices.
26 (3) The term does not include a device used:
27 (i) To provide support for functional body position or
28 proper balance.
29 (ii) For safe transportation to and from a facility or
30 medical treatment such as sandbags to limit movement after
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1 medical treatment, a wheelchair belt used for body positioning
2 and support or a helmet used for prevention of injury during
3 seizure activity.
4 "Solitary confinement" means isolating a child in a cell or
5 room, locked or unlocked, for punitive or disciplinary purposes.
6 The term does not include a cool-down or time-out period as
7 described under subsection (d)(1).
8 Section 2. This act shall take effect in 60 days.
20250HB1577PN1864 - 9 -Connected on the graph
Outbound (4)
| date | type | to | amount | role | source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | referred_to_committee | Pennsylvania Senate Aging And Youth Committee | — | pa-leg | |
| — | referred_to_committee | Pennsylvania House Appropriations Committee | — | pa-leg | |
| — | referred_to_committee | Pennsylvania House Rules Committee | — | pa-leg | |
| — | referred_to_committee | Pennsylvania House Children And Youth Committee | — | pa-leg |
The full graph
Every typed relationship touching this entity — 4 edges across 1 category. Grouped by what the connection is; the heaviest few are shown, with a link to the full list.
Who matters
Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.
| # | Member | Role | Speeches | Voted | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Melissa L. Shusterman (D, state_lower PA-157) | sponsor | 0 | — | 5 |
| 2 | Benjamin V. Sanchez (D, state_lower PA-153) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 3 | Carol Hill-Evans (D, state_lower PA-95) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 4 | Dan K. Williams (D, state_lower PA-74) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 5 | Gina H. Curry (D, state_lower PA-164) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 6 | Heather Boyd (D, state_lower PA-163) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 7 | Joe Webster (D, state_lower PA-150) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 8 | Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (D, state_lower PA-129) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 9 | Joseph C. Hohenstein (D, state_lower PA-177) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 10 | La'Tasha D. Mayes (D, state_lower PA-24) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 11 | Liz Hanbidge (D, state_lower PA-61) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 12 | Nikki Rivera (D, state_lower PA-96) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 13 | Perry S. Warren (D, state_lower PA-31) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 14 | Sean Dougherty (D, state_lower PA-172) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 15 | Tarik Khan (D, state_lower PA-194) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
Predicted vote
Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.
0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)
By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no
Activity
Every typed-graph event involving this entity, newest first. Each row is one edge in the influence graph; click the date to jump to its provenance.
- 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania Senate Aging And Youth Committee · pa-leg
- 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Appropriations Committee · pa-leg
- 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Rules Committee · pa-leg
- 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Children And Youth Committee · pa-leg