Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Governor taps $ 1.4M to add 4th crisis center

- JOHN MORITZ

Arkansas’ plan to open three regional crisis centers for the mentally ill got a boost Thursday from Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who pledged to seek $ 1.4 million in rainy- day funds for a fourth center.

Hutchinson’s office announced the decision to county and state officials who had gathered in Little Rock to whittle down four applicatio­ns from counties seeking to establish centers.

Instead of picking three, the panel’s decision was made moot.

The proposed 16- bed “crisis stabilizat­ion units” will be in Pulaski, Sebastian, Craighead and Washington counties.

The Washington County facility was part of a joint bid for Northwest Arkansas for a center that also will service Benton and Madison counties.

“The original plan was to select three counties, but we received four stellar applicatio­ns, and so I decided to award funding to all four,” Hutchinson said in a news release. “Each of the counties’ submission­s went above and beyond the parameters laid out in the applicatio­n process, with substantia­l support from local leadership and the community.”

To draw from the rainyday fund, Hutchinson will still need to seek approval

from the Arkansas Legislativ­e Council, the panel of lawmakers that makes key decisions between legislativ­e sessions. A vote has yet to be scheduled.

Hutchinson included $ 5 million in funding for three crisis centers in his budget announced last November. During the general session earlier this year, lawmakers approved the facilities as part of an omnibus package aimed at reducing the need for prison beds.

The Criminal Justice Efficiency and Safety Act, or Act 423 of 2017, authorized the use of crisis centers as an alternativ­e to jail for people undergoing a mental- health episode.

The centers would be operated 24 hours, seven days a week by health care workers and have access to psychiatri­c consultati­on. The goal for the facilities is to stabilize a patient within 72 hours.

State funding under Hutchinson’s budget will provide the centers with about $ 1.6 million annually to operate. Counties will pay the startup costs, with each of the applicatio­ns proposing to use existing sites.

Sebastian County Sheriff

Bill Hollenbeck, a member of the interagenc­y task force establishe­d by Act 423, called the idea for crisis centers “smart justice.”

They are “a real conservati­ve approach to making sure we’ve got jail beds for the real bad guys,” Hollenbeck told the panel Thursday.

The panel — officially the Interagenc­y Task Force for the Implementa­tion of Criminal Prevention Initiative­s — convened for the first time Thursday at the Capitol.

Rep. Clarke Tucker, D- Little Rock, who was one of the legislativ­e sponsors of Act 423, was elected chairman of the panel. Other members include circuit and district judges, a sheriff, county judge, prosecutor­s, lawmakers, and Parole Board and correction officials.

Tucker told the Arkansas Democrat- Gazette last month that geographic factors likely would play a role in considerat­ion of the applicatio­ns. There was a desire to have the centers spread out, and placed in large population centers, he said.

With their plans to consider the merits of the four applicatio­ns scuttled, Tucker instead led a laid- back meeting in which the panel members discussed their expectatio­ns for the work ahead.

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