{"id":86490,"date":"2022-05-29T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-05-30T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/bill-can-be-a-step-forward-for-alaskas-mental-health-system\/"},"modified":"2022-06-02T11:20:22","modified_gmt":"2022-06-02T19:20:22","slug":"bill-can-be-a-step-forward-for-alaskas-mental-health-system","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/bill-can-be-a-step-forward-for-alaskas-mental-health-system\/","title":{"rendered":"Bill can be a step forward for Alaska’s mental health system"},"content":{"rendered":"
By James B. Gottstein<\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n While not perfect, HB172 passed by the Legislature on May 17 has the possibility of dramatically improving the lives of people who are now being hauled to the hospital in handcuffs by police, psychiatrically imprisoned (euphemistically called involuntary commitment), and psychiatrically drugged against their will.<\/p>\n In 2018, the Alaska Psychiatric Institute had been so seriously mismanaged it was threatened with the loss of its accreditation and reduced its capacity from 80 to the mid-20s to retain its accreditation. People against whom the courts had ordered psychiatric evaluations were being illegally held for long periods of time in jails and emergency rooms. The Disability Law Center and Alaska Public Defender Agency sued. They won in 2019, which in 2020 resulted in a final judgment (order) negotiated by the parties. HB172 was enacted to implement parts of the Settlement. A major part of the Settlement is the State agreed to try to establish what is called the Crisis Now approach.<\/p>\n The Crisis Now approach, championed by the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority, is designed as an alternative to calling the police on disturbing people thought to be mentally ill. It has a 24\/7 call-center expected to resolve 90 out of a 100 calls on the phone, a mobile crisis team expected to resolve seven of the ten out of 100 calls not resolved over the phone, with only three of the hundred taken to a short term crisis stabilization or residential center. These crisis centers are designed to be more humane than psychiatric wards.<\/p>\n HB172 allows the mobile crisis teams and crisis centers to go to court to force people into the crisis centers. During testimony on HB172, it was stated forcing people into the crisis centers will be the last resort, but the legislation does not say that. Opponents of HB172 do not like the expansion of mechanisms to lock people up for allegedly being mentally ill, which is a legitimate concern, but having people in altered states go to presumably more humane places than now is a huge improvement. However, if it isn’t voluntary it isn’t treatment.<\/p>\n