RutlandHerald.com - We Are Vermont

Mental health facing $20M cut



Toolbox

By DANIEL BARLOW Vermont Press Bureau - Published: December 1, 2009

MONTPELIER — The state of Vermont is considering a nearly $20 million cut to mental health services in its next budget, a reduction that advocates say could result in up to 3,000 people across the state losing services.

State officials outlined proposed cuts to lawmakers and mental health advocates at a meeting last week about the future of the Vermont State Hospital in Waterbury, the facility that serves people with severe cases of mental illness.

Cuts under discussion by Gov. James Douglas' administration include $10.5 million from the state's Community Rehabilitation and Treatment program and a $2.7 million cut in funding for adult outpatient care, which will eliminate all state funding for that program.

The proposals have shocked mental health advocates.

"This would be the equivalent of having emergency rooms at local hospitals open only one day a week," said Ken Libertoff, the executive director of the Vermont Association for Mental Health, a Montpelier advocacy organization. "If these cuts go through, it would effectively end Vermont's four-decade era of commitment to community mental health."

Vermont's 2011 budget problem will likely be the top issue in the new legislative session in January and the proposals to trim the state's mental health services — the Vermont Department of Mental Health's annual budget is about $157 million — is the first glimpse at just how far some cuts may go.

According to advocates who were at the meeting last week where the numbers were unveiled, the proposal also calls for a $1.7 million cut in funding to the State Hospital and a $5.5 million cut from children's services.

Michael Hartman, the commissioner of the Mental Health Department, said much of the cuts come from an unexpected upcoming reduction in Medicare funding the state will see from the federal government.

Hartman said the state saw an increase in Medicare funding for mental health services as part of President Obama's economic stimulus plan — money that will drop in next year's budget and be eliminated completely in the budget year following that.

"It's up to the White House and Congress to decide if they will take this money back," Hartman said.

These cuts would be devastating to Vermont's community mental health system, according to Margaret Joyal, the director of outpatient services for the Washington County Mental Health Services.

Over the last year, Washington County Mental Health has seen more than 800 people come in through the doors needing a total of 8,500 services, she said. Statewide, about 20 to 30 percent of the people community mental health centers see don't have health insurance, she added.

"I would have to cut my staff," Joyal said of the affect the proposed cuts would have on the organization's budget. "I'm not even sure if we could exist anymore with these cuts."

Reports of these proposed cuts come less than a week after the Burlington Police Chief Michael Scherling warned lawmakers that cuts to the state's mental health services so far have resulted in a cost-shift onto law enforcement and the courts.

"I predict that this move would cost the state of Vermont more money down the road," Joyal said. "In six months to a year, we'll really see these costs show up."

Hartman — who said these proposed cuts are part of a budgeting exercise that the state is now undergoing — said there will be "dramatic" changes to Vermont's mental health system as the state struggles with its budget crisis.

He said that $1.5 million of the proposed cuts to outpatient adult services would be used to boost the efforts of emergency crisis teams that would be called to assist in mental health and substance abuse emergencies.

Rep. Michael Fisher, D-Lincoln, a member of the Legislature's Mental Health Oversight Committee, said "there is no doubt that these cuts will result in people out there not getting the treatment they need and not getting better."

"A budget cut like this one would undermine the entire community mental health system," Fisher said.

daniel.barlow@timesargus.com








READER COMMENTS


....Also....Welfare recipients should not be allowed to breed. They intentionally breed more kids so that they can collect more money. Before anyone can collect welfare, they should have to have their tubes tied, or get a vasectomy. The welfare system is way out of control. Forest park?? There's another example of unnecessarily wasted tax money. They want to spend 21 million dollars to replace the complex??? Give me a break. Freeloaders are lucky to have a roof, any roof over their heads. There is nothing wrong with Forest Park the way it is. If the state wants to fix it up, make the welfare recipients do the work. It's not like they don't have the time.
-- Posted by Smart Thinking on Sun, Dec 6, 2009, 12:15 am EST

report this comment



Ummmm.. While there are those who abuse this system, there are those who truly need the help. This is not the place to make cuts. Welfare would be the first place to make cuts. The welfare system is abused by the 80% of the recipients who CHOOSE not to work. The state grants welfare benefits to alcoholics. The state pays alcoholics to stay home and drink. The state pays for the medical problems that the drinking causes. It would be much cheaper to force the alcoholics to take antibuse or a like drug to make it impossible for them to drink. We should enact mandatory drug and alcohol screening for welfare recipients. If they have either in their systems, they should be immediately shut off. Welfare recipients should not be allowed to use tobacco either. We should not pay for the tobacco and the medical problems that it causes. We need to get tough with these lazy slobs.
-- Posted by Smart Thinking on Sun, Dec 6, 2009, 12:09 am EST

report this comment



I've worked in mental health, there are no "parties". You have no idea how difficult it is to help those who may not want your help or think they need it. No one is becoming a millionaire by working as a home provider or case manager. Those are the hardest jobs. The only ones making big bucks are the CEOs just like any other company. The BS falls down the ladder. Now with budget cuts there will more people out there in need. There will be more addiction, because people will self medicate. There will be more violence, because people can't understand society and will either be the aggressor or the victim, because of vulnerability. It's never a good thing when budgets get cut. Someone always suffers.
-- Posted by SB None on Wed, Dec 2, 2009, 11:39 am EST

report this comment



Amen, True Vermonter!
People will discuss how many millions should be doled to the mental health industry, but they don't seem to want to ask why it's supposedly needed in the first place. True Vermonter is making a joke, but underlying that joke is some harsh economic reality that Vermonters will eventually be forced to face.
..
-- Posted by mark on Wed, Dec 2, 2009, 9:05 am EST

report this comment



Living in this state is enough to make you mental!!!
-- Posted by True Vermonter on Wed, Dec 2, 2009, 7:06 am EST

report this comment



Looks like all those HOMECARE providers out there and YOU know who you are, may have to find a real job to pay for your new homes,cars, vacations retirements. The teat is drying up! Any way what made you all think that you could just sit around and collect medicade dollars for ever. That whole thing has been the number one waste of tax dollars since the trainingschool closed! Glad to hear it hope you all cane see even more ways to SAVE MONEY!LMAOROTF!!!!!!!!!!!!
-- Posted by Wayne Davis on Tue, Dec 1, 2009, 5:42 pm EST

report this comment



What about the people who rely on these services that can't be a productive member of society because they are mentally disabled to the point they need help doing everything? Sounds like you don't know your butt from your elbow liber tarian

I have worked in the mental health industry for the past 7 years and if there was a party I've missed it, because I can barely afford the gas I use to drive the 100 miles a day for some of these guys who can't do anything without some kind of supervision. I do it because I enjoy it and I enjoy making a difference in their lives...
-- Posted by None None on Tue, Dec 1, 2009, 5:16 pm EST

report this comment



Good news. Now maybe all these victims of governmental dependency can get back on their feet and stop being used as fodder for the profitable mental health industry.

So many people, when told "you need help," will believe it, and so they will never recover. I have come to realize the best help is the help from within, and that can only come when the noise of even the best-intentioned is silenced.

Be yourself, not someone else's couch fodder.
..
.
-- Posted by mark on Tue, Dec 1, 2009, 11:13 am EST

report this comment



Cutting mental health services by $20 million? Man, that's just crazy!

(Sorry.)
-- Posted by Son Of That Guy on Tue, Dec 1, 2009, 10:23 am EST

report this comment



So, Liber, after your bad experience at the mental heath agency, where will you go next time you need their services?
-- Posted by Notta Bushman on Tue, Dec 1, 2009, 10:09 am EST

report this comment



Great move to cut this money. The Community mental health providers are a joke. Poor leadership and substandard level of service actually hurts clients. I have seen it in many times where unqualified "case workers" treat clients poorly, lie on their time spent with clients and get paid for it and just generally have a bad attitude.
With proper leadership, these programs can become better with these funding cuts.
What's shocking to those who work in these agencies is that the party is over. Finally.
-- Posted by Liber Tarian on Tue, Dec 1, 2009, 8:20 am EST

report this comment


You must be logged in to leave a comment. Register | Log In

Logout