+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program...

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program...

Date post: 20-Apr-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 1 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
315
Stateline 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless. Ben Margot/The Associated Press Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside. Page 1 of 7 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C... 9/20/2019 https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...
Transcript
Page 1: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 2: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 3: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 4: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 5: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 6: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 7: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 8: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 9: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 10: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 11: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 12: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 13: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 14: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 15: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 16: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 17: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 18: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 19: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 20: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 21: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 22: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 23: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 24: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 25: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 26: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 27: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 28: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 29: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 30: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 31: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 32: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 33: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 34: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 35: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 36: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 37: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 38: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 39: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 40: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 41: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 42: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 43: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 44: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 45: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 46: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 47: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 48: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 49: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 50: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 51: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 52: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 53: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 54: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 55: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 56: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 57: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 58: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 59: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 60: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 61: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 62: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 63: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 64: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 65: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 66: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 67: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 68: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 69: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 70: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 71: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 72: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 73: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 74: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 75: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 76: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 77: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 78: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 79: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 80: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 81: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 82: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 83: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 84: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 85: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 86: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 87: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 88: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 89: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 90: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 91: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 92: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 93: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 94: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 95: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 96: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 97: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 98: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 99: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 100: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 101: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 102: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 103: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 104: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 105: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 106: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 107: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 108: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 109: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 110: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 111: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 112: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 113: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 114: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 115: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 116: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 117: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 118: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 119: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 120: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 121: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 122: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 123: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 124: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 125: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 126: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 127: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 128: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 129: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 130: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 131: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 132: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 133: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 134: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 135: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 136: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 137: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 138: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 139: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 140: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 141: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 142: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 143: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 144: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 145: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 146: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 147: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 148: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 149: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 150: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 151: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 152: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 153: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 154: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 155: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 156: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 157: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 158: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 159: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 160: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 161: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 162: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 163: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 164: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 165: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 166: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 167: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 168: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 169: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 170: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 171: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 172: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 173: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 174: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 175: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 176: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 177: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 178: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 179: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 180: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 181: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 182: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 183: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 184: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 185: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 186: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 187: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 188: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 189: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 190: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 191: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 192: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 193: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 194: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 195: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 196: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 197: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 198: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 199: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 200: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 201: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 202: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 203: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 204: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 205: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 206: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 207: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 208: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 209: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 210: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 211: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 212: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 213: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 214: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 215: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 216: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 217: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 218: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 219: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 220: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 221: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 222: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 223: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 224: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 225: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 226: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 227: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 228: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 229: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 230: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 231: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 232: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 233: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 234: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 235: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 236: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 237: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 238: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 239: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 240: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 241: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 242: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 243: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 244: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 245: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 246: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 247: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 248: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 249: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 250: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 251: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 252: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 253: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 254: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 255: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 256: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 257: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 258: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 259: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 260: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 261: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 262: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 263: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 264: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 265: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 266: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 267: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 268: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 269: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 270: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 271: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 272: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 273: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 274: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 275: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 276: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 277: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 278: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 279: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 280: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 281: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 282: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 283: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 284: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 285: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 286: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 287: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 288: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 289: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 290: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 291: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 292: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 293: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 294: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 295: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 296: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 297: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 298: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 299: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 300: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 301: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 302: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 303: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 304: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 305: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 306: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 307: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 308: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 309: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Stateline

'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States STATELINE ARTICLE

September 11, 2019 By: Teresa Wiltz Topics: Safety Net & Health Read time: 6 min

A man lies on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. In June, city officials adopted legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials say the regulation will primarily benefit the homeless.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

Often, when she got high on meth, “Melanie,” who suffers from schizophrenia, would strip naked and run screaming straight into San Francisco traffic. Invariably, police would bring her to the hospital, where she’d undergo treatment. There, her psychotic symptoms would quickly subside.

Page 1 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 310: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

But by law, Melanie, who is homeless, couldn’t be held for longer than 72 hours without her consent, so back on the street she would go. Until she relapsed, and her drug use triggered yet another psychotic episode, and she ended up in the emergency room all over again. And each time, she got a little worse.

“Legally, she couldn’t be helped,” said Angelica Almeida, director of the forensic and justice involved behavioral health services at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

“Those are the cases we bring home with us, when we really feel limited in our ability to help people recover.”

Melanie may soon be able to get the long-term help she needs. Under a new pilot program, court-appointed guardians in San Francisco will be able to order treatment for up to six months for people with mental illness and addiction who are deemed by doctors to be “gravely disabled.” The program will focus primarily on the city’s homeless population.

Most of the treatment will be paid for through the state’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal.

San Francisco’s program is allowed under a new California law that permits counties to include addiction along with mental illness in the criteria for involuntary treatment.

Facing increasing homelessness — up for the second year in a row, according to federal statistics — the opioid crisis and many people with severe mental illness living on the street, cities and states are taking a fresh look at involuntary commitment, said Lisa Dailey, legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, a nonprofit based in Arlington, Virginia, that advocates for those with severe mental illness.

But advocates for the homeless and for civil rights are pushing back against those laws, arguing that confining people against their will violates their civil rights. They also worry that facilities won’t have enough room for the additional patients, and that the laws will disproportionately affect minorities.

The new California law assigns people who are incapacitated to conservators, who are guardians appointed by a court to make decisions on their behalf. To qualify under the new conservatorship law, people must have refused treatment, been detained frequently by the police, and, at least eight times in one year, been held for treatment and observation at a mental hospital under a “psychiatric hold,” typically for 72 hours.

Page 2 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 311: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

This year, California removed a provision that required a person to receive outpatient treatment before being involuntarily committed. San Francisco will be the first county to use the law.

“It’s heartbreaking,” said California Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener, who sponsored the measure. “You see people who are literally dying on our streets. It’s not compassionate or progressive to let them unravel and die.”

The law doesn’t specifically address homelessness, but it came in direct response to the state’s homeless crisis, Wiener said.

About 4,000 people in San Francisco are homeless, have a mental illness and an addiction, according to city officials. Wiener said the county expects to enroll about a hundred people in the program.

But at a May hearing, San Francisco Supervisor Shamann Walton, who was the lone vote against the program, said he was worried that most of the people forced into treatment would be minorities.

“As a person of color, there is always a major concern any time we put any system in place of incarceration,” he said at the hearing. (Walton declined a Stateline request for an interview.)

Another concern is whether there are enough beds to house homeless people with mental illness, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, a San Francisco-based nonprofit.

“And, of course there aren’t,” Friedenbach said. “Look around the city. If there were beds, you wouldn’t see what you see.” Politicians wanted to respond to the crisis, she added, but the law “doesn’t really do anything but sounds good to the public.”

Since 2012, San Francisco has lost more than a third of licensed residential facilities for people under 60 with mental illness, and more than a quarter of those for the elderly with mental illness, because the cost of operating them is too great, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. City officials expect to lose another 71 beds by 2020, according to Mayor London Breed’s office.

Page 3 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 312: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

On Monday, Breed, a Democrat, announced plans to expand mental health residential facilities. The city plans to increase funding for “board and care homes”— privately owned and operated residential facilities — and purchase homes at risk of closing.

A Growing TrendA similar effort is underway in Hawaii, where a new state law allows courts to order treatment for homeless people deemed to be a danger to themselves. In the past year, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and Washington also have eased their involuntary outpatient commitment rules for getting people with mental illness into treatment.

In Pennsylvania, for example, a person no longer has to become violent to qualify for help, and Texas now allows jail inmates to be diverted to mental health treatment.

Pennsylvania state Rep. Thomas Murt, a Republican, said he introduced the bill because he hoped to keep people at home while they got mental health treatment. He said he wanted to make the commitment criteria more flexible, so patients could be treated sooner, on an outpatient basis, rather than being committed to a hospital.

The idea is to stabilize people, get them into treatment early, so they can stay at home and avoid brushes with the criminal justice system, Murt said.

“Families who care for a loved one who struggles with mental illness don’t want the police to show up and put handcuffs on the person and take them to jail,” Murt said. “If you struggle with a mental illness, prison or jail is not the place you want to be.”

To be sure, mandating treatment for people with severe mental illness isn’t new. But most states’ involuntary commitment laws are rarely used, Dailey said, because they are vaguely worded or have restrictions that create barriers to timely treatment.

According to data compiled by the Treatment Advocacy Center, 24 states have ambiguous laws on the books relating to court-ordered outpatient programs. That can make it harder to get patients treated if officials aren’t clear about how the program is supposed to work or who the right candidates are, she said.

“You really need to address mental health issues if you’re going to make any headway getting people off the street,” Dailey said.

Page 4 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 313: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Roughly a third of the U.S. homeless population has an untreated, serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder or major depression — according to a 2016 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center. Among homeless people with severe mental illness, who are often victims of predators, the mortality rate is as much as nine times higher than the general population, the report found.

A 2015 survey by the National League of Cities found that mental illness was the third-highest cause of homelessness among single adults. (Poverty and a lack of affordable housing were the top causes.)

Because there aren’t enough hospital beds, “jail becomes the default” for those with severe mental illness, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, a coalition of police unions and organizations based in Alexandria, Virginia.

Hawaii EffortUnder Hawaii’s new law, courts may assign a public guardian for up to a year and order psychiatric treatment for patients deemed to be a danger to themselves.

Honolulu will deploy a “street medicine team” to identify homeless people in need and try to get them into treatment. If they refuse, the team will try to identify a potential guardian among their family members and friends. If none can be found, the team can enlist the help of a judge.

Court-ordered treatment improves the odds of continued treatment after discharge, helping keep people from becoming homeless, said Dailey of the Treatment Advocacy Center. And if a person is already homeless, having the ability to refer that person for an evaluation “provides a much-needed avenue to care,” she said.

Kimo Carvalho — director of community relations and development for the Institute for Human Services, the Honolulu nonprofit that will be administering the program — praised the approach as “much more proactive,” as opposed to “hospitalizing them because they’ve got wounds with maggots coming out.”

Page 5 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 314: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

In a statement to state lawmakers, Mandy Fernandes of the ACLU of Hawaii said the measure may infringe on people’s civil liberties. She said people shouldn’t be compelled to get treatment until they’ve been offered housing, case management by a social worker and other aid. (The ACLU of Hawaii declined an interview request from Stateline.)

But mental health advocates argue that the Hawaii program and others like it restore civil rights to those with mental illness by getting them on a path back to health.

Carvalho pointed out that many homeless people with mental illness live in undignified, unsanitary conditions.

“Because of that, their skin has rotted, they have flesh-eating diseases, they have chronic medical illnesses parallel to their homelessness,” Carvalho said. “There’s a new generation of psychiatric meds that have the potential to dramatically change their lives.”

Negotiating Lower Health Care Prices Pays Off for Colorado Community

Decline in Public Health Coverage for Kids Helps Drive Rising Uninsured Rate

Teresa Wiltz Staff Writer Stateline

Topics Safety Net, Health

Places California, Hawaii

EXPLORE MORE FROM STATELINE

AUTHORS

RELATED

explore by place

explore by topic

Page 6 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...

Page 315: 'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care ......legislation to set up a program allowing people with mental illness and addiction to be forced into treatment. Officials

Media Contact

Jeremy RatnerDirector, Communications202.540.6507

About Stateline

Stateline provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

About Stateline

SIGN UP

Sign up for our daily update—original reporting on state policy, plus the day's five top reads from around the Web.

Email address SUBMIT

Page 7 of 7'Gravely Disabled' Homeless Forced Into Mental Health Care in More States | The Pew C...

9/20/2019https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/09/11/gravely-dis...


Recommended