An Act To Set Standards for Interviewing Children Who Are Subjects of a Child Protective Intervention
Sec. 1. 22 MRSA §4021, sub-§3, ¶C, as enacted by PL 1981, c. 369, §10, is amended to read:
(1) School officials may require that the department employee requesting to interview the child provide a written certification that in the department's judgment the interview is necessary to carry out the department's duties under this chapter.
(2) In order for the department to be able to conduct interviews in a manner consistent with good forensic practice, except as provided in subparagraph (1), school officials may not place any conditions on the department’s ability to conduct the interview. Without limiting the generality of this subparagraph, school officials are specifically prohibited from:
(a) Requiring that certain persons be present during the interview;
(b) Prohibiting certain persons from being present during the interview; and
(c) Requiring notice to or consent from a parent.
(3) School officials shall provide an appropriate, quiet and private place for the interview to occur.
(4) That the department intends to interview the child is confidential information and may not be disclosed to any person except those school officials, including an attorney for the school, who need the information to comply with the provisions of this paragraph.
(5) School personnel who assist the department in making the child available for the interview or who otherwise comply with this paragraph are "participating in a related child protection investigation or proceeding" for purposes of section 4014.
Violation of this paragraph subjects any person involved in the violation, including individual school personnel, to the penalty provided in section 4009. This section does not apply to out-of-home abuse and neglect allegations as covered under section 4088.
summary
This bill clarifies that the Department of Health and Human Services may, upon request, interview a child at a school if necessary to carry out the department’s child protection activities, and that school officials must cooperate with the conduct of such an interview under penalty of law.