Sheriff: State Mental Health Cuts Undermine Public Safety
As states have struggled to balance their budgets during the economic downturn, mental health programs have frequently weathered . Three-quarters of states have cut their mental health budgets during each of the past four fiscal years, for a combined reduction of $4.35 billion, according to the , which represents state mental health agencies.
At the same time, demand for mental health services has increased by 10 percent, the group says.
But state mental health agencies arent the only onesfeeling the pain say theyre bearing the brunt of the cuts.
Brian Gootkin is the Sheriff of Gallatin County, Montana an area twice the size of Rhode Island, encompassing Bozeman and part of Yellowstone National Park and he oversees 48 deputies. Gootkin says his force is experiencing a significant increase in psychiatric emergencies, which he says is adirect result of mental health funding reductions. its state mental health budget by 5.8 percent since 2009, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness.
I would go so far as to say that my officers have become an involuntary component of the State of Montanas emergency psychiatric response teams,Gootkin said at a briefing on Capitol Hill Thursday.
When the police are called for a psychiatric emergency, he says his deputies are required to handcuff the patient and transport him or her in the back of the patrol call to the nearest facility, which may be up to two hours away. The lengthy process has a major impact on the day-to-day operations of law enforcement, he explains, but its nothing in comparison to his colleagues in Custer County, Montana, where the nearest state hospital is nearly six hours away and there are only three deputies.
The increase in psych calls has a direct impact on public safety, Gootkin argues. Every deputy that is diverted to the Montana State Hospital, or even to our local hospital is not on patrol maintaining public order and deterring crime, he says. And while his officers have some mental health training, they are not mental health professionals, and I dont want them to be. I want them to be deputy sheriffs.