
Buffalo, N.Y. (WBEN) - "This is a situation we're talking about, we're talking about mental health, it is not an urban issue, it is not a suburban issue, it is not a rural issue. It is a national crisis."
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul was in Buffalo on Monday at the Delavan Grider Community Center to highlight her $1 billion transformative, multi-year investment to overhaul the State's continuum of mental health care, and drastically reduce the number of New Yorkers with unmet mental health needs.
The Mental Health Care Plan was passed as part of the Fiscal Year 2024 Budget, and will increase inpatient psychiatric treatment capacity, dramatically expand outpatient services, boost insurance coverage, and develop thousands of more units of supportive and transitional housing for people with mental illness.
The Governor was joined by a number of mental health and community leaders, as well as Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown and Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26).
"Since the pandemic, more than one in three New Yorkers have sought mental health care," said Gov. Hochul during her address on Monday. "Now, to me, that is a positive in that people sought health care, they sought the help, or they know someone who has. It also means there's probably a lot of other people that are still living with it."
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Gov. Hochul also issued proclamations making May Mental Health Awareness Month and the week of May 7 to 13, Children's Mental Health Awareness Week.
The state budget provides $890 million in capital and $120 million in operating funding to establish and operate 3,500 new residential units serving those with mental health challenges.
It also includes $30 million to expand mental health services for school-aged children throughout the state, including $20 million for school-based mental health services and $10 million to implement wraparound services training.
Additionally, the budget includes $10 million to strengthen suicide prevention programs for high-risk youth.
In addition to providing funding for new residential units and investing in mental health services for school-aged youth, the Mental Health Care Plan will invest in peer-based outreach, close gaps in insurance coverage for behavioral health services, and significantly expand outpatient services.
The Plan delivers for New Yorkers in need through:
- Providing $18 million capital and $30 million operating funding to expand inpatient psychiatric beds, including opening 150 new adult beds in State-operated psychiatric hospitals, representing the largest expansion at these facilities in decades.
- Investing $60 million in capital and $121.6 million operating funding, which will establish 12 new comprehensive psychiatric emergency programs providing hospital-level crisis care and triple the number of State-funded Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics statewide - from 13 to 39 - that offer walk-in, immediate integrated mental health and substance use disorder services for New Yorkers of all ages and insurance status.
- Funding 42 additional Assertive Community Treatment teams for children and adults to provide mobile, high intensity services to the most at-risk New Yorkers and eight additional Safe Options Support teams — five in New York City and three in the rest of state.
- Providing $28 million to help create 50 new Critical Time Intervention care coordination teams to provide wrap-around services, from housing to job supports, for individuals needing transition assistance, including children and adults discharged from hospitals and emergency rooms.
- Building on investments made in the FY 2023 Budget, including $12 million for HealthySteps and home-based crisis intervention programs to promote early childhood development and treatment for children and teens; and $3.1 million to bolster treatment for individuals with eating disorders.
- Allocating $2.8 million to expand the Intensive and Sustained Engagement Treatment program to offer peer-based outreach and engagement for adults with serious mental illness.
- Providing $18 million over two years to reimburse providers for family preventive mental health services for parents and their children; and $24 million over two years to reimburse providers for adverse childhood experience screenings.
- Supporting the workforce with a 4 percent cost of living adjustment and $14 million for the Office of Mental Health's Community Mental Health Loan Repayment Program, expanding the eligibility for the program to include licensed mental health professionals.
- Additionally, the state budget closes gaps in insurance coverage that have posed a barrier to New Yorkers needing mental health care and substance use disorder services.
The FY 2024 Budget also provides an additional $60 million to support the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline - an increase of $25 million from the prior budget.