ALBANY — A new state budget will improve services for children in schools, veterans and mentally ill people charged with crimes and address a shortage of care workers amid a growing mental health crisis for the state and the nation. increased funding for mental health services by more than $400 million. health crisis.
This budget will help state agencies build mental health clinics in schools, increase inpatient psychiatric beds in state facilities, and address the ongoing mental health needs of veterans, first responders, and law enforcement and correctional officers. Fund the whole thing.
The state Department of Mental Health would receive an additional $118 million, bringing its budget to $4.9 billion. That compares with $3.3 billion in 2022, when the state began a multi-year plan to strengthen mental health services, according to the state Budget Office. The Budget Office said it could not provide comprehensive figures for total spending across state agencies on mental health services.
According to the state Department of Health, more than 1 in 5 New Yorkers have symptoms of a mental illness, and 1 in 10 adults and children face serious challenges that affect their work, family and school lives. As a result, the state is prioritizing funding for mental health services. If left untreated, consequences include academic failure, teenage pregnancy, unemployment, divorce, suicide, and violence.
Nationally, the U.S. Surgeon General says the country is in the midst of a youth mental health crisis, including an increase in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, all of which are closely linked to addiction to drugs like OxyContin and fentanyl. It was determined that the situation was worsened by the situation.
“This is a crisis,” said Ramesh Raghavan, a professor at New York University’s Silver School of Social Work and co-author of Investing in Children’s Mental Health. “The needs in this sector are particularly acute among young people.”
The crisis has prompted states, including California, and the federal government to provide more funding. New York’s efforts began in earnest with Hochul’s 2023 State of the Union address. He called for a $1 billion, multi-year investment after “years of underinvestment even before the pandemic.”
“The increase is very, very positive considering there seems to be such a huge lack of investment in this country,” Raghaven told Newsday.
But Raghaven and other mental health leaders who provide care in the state also said a better balance is needed in how the money is spent. For example, states focus on increasing the number of psychiatric beds in hospitals and psychiatric centers where community-based care is most effective for most patients.
“A psychiatric bed is a place of care, not a type of care,” he says. “And we should invest in more types of care.”
He said the state could take more balanced preventative measures, including earlier intervention for young people.
Half of all mental illnesses begin at age 14, and three-quarters by age 24, the state health department said, citing national statistics.
the Mental Health Administration, which provides services and controls the majority of mental health spending, and mental health spending under the Departments of Justice, Education, Health, and Veterans Affairs; The budget adopted last Saturday includes:
- $33 million to expand mental health services for people with mental illnesses who have been arrested. That includes $10 million to expand mental health courts that specialize in handling such cases. There are currently 41 mental health courts in cities, boroughs, and counties across the state, including Nassau and Suffolk counties. Hochul said at a Manhattan news conference Wednesday that his goal is to have special courts in all 62 counties.
- $20 million for school-based mental health clinics across the state and $19 million for additional services for school-age youth. An additional $9.6 million will be used to continue serving youth in our communities wherever possible. Currently, more than 1,100 school-based mental health clinic satellites are operating or planned in 4,771 public schools across the state.
- A $55 million investment will add 200 more inpatient psychiatric beds in state facilities, 15 of which will be for juveniles.
- Doubles funding for suicide prevention by first responders, veterans, law enforcement officers, and correctional officers to $2 million.
- $1.25 million to hire more staff at the Department of Veterans Affairs to process more claims; This includes those caused by post-traumatic stress disorder.
“By strengthening mental health support, we are not only helping people find stability and peace, but also making our communities safer,” Hochul said.
The budget also provides $244 million to address workforce shortages that reduce the care capacity of state-funded nonprofit service providers and can delay patients’ access to psychologists and psychiatrists by months. Funding of $1,000 is also provided. The budget includes funding for a 2.84% cost-of-living adjustment for most mental health workers. Nonprofit organizations had called for a 3.2% increase.
The budget also includes $4 million for student loan forgiveness for licensed mental health practitioners who serve children and families who qualify for the program.
Glenn Liebman, CEO of the New York State Mental Health Association, said the majority of the state’s front-line care workers earn between $25,000 and $35,000 a year, and are based in Long Island and New York. Salaries are said to be slightly higher in the city. Services under state contract. Liebman told Newsday that wages have been largely stagnant, with no cost of living increase for more than 15 years. This has created a staffing shortage, with the Albany nonprofit saying it has 1,500 employees and 200 vacancies.
“They work with sometimes challenging people, and their appreciation is the paycheck they get at McDonald’s,” Liebman said.
“It’s hard to keep a job unless you move up the ranks or hold three or four jobs,” said Jihoon Kim, CEO of the mental health organization Inunity Alliance and a former Hochul staffer. he says. “But that’s really just the beginning…but I’m a realist.”