Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia still sending mentally ill people to homeless shelters

- BY ALAN JUDD THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON

ATLANTA — Mentally ill patients often left Georgia’s state psychiatri­c hospitals with just a bus token and directions to a homeless shelter.

For people with disabiliti­es, these same institutio­ns became places of permanent confinemen­t.

This is the system that Georgia, under pressure from the federal government, pledged seven years ago to radically overhaul. But with a court-enforced deadline fast approachin­g, the state increasing­ly seems unlikely to fulfill its promises.

Georgia has less than 14 months — until

June 30, 2018 — to comply with a settlement it reached with the U.S. Department of Justice in 2010. The agreement followed an investigat­ion that concluded the state had systematic­ally violated the rights of people with mental illness and developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

But the state continues to discharge patients with mental illness to places where they are unlikely to get psychiatri­c treatment: extended-stay motels, for instance, and even the massive Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter in midtown Atlanta. All patients with disabiliti­es are supposed to be moved into group homes or other community-based facilities, but at the current rate of progress, the state might not meet that requiremen­t for another 10 years.

As officials try to comply with the agreement, they also are investigat­ing an alarming number of deaths in community-based treatment: about 350 since 2014. Those apparently include five dozen suicides.

A court-appointed monitor credits the state with making many promised improvemen­ts, especially regarding crisis interventi­on and other services for people with mental illness.

Still, a grim picture emerges from the monitor’s most recent report, as well as from interviews and documents reviewed by The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution.

It is “absolutely essential” that the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disability “act with urgency to meet its obligation­s,” the monitor, Elizabeth Jones, wrote in late March in a report to U.S. District Judge Charles Pannell. “Although there has been noteworthy progress in certain discrete areas of implementa­tion, the reform efforts require additional diligent and effective actions if compliance is to be achieved within the anticipate­d timeframe.”

Department officials declined to be interviewe­d.

In a statement, the agency did not say whether it expects to meet the deadlines next year. But the department said it is moving at “a reasonable pace ... Transition­s are carefully and individual­ly planned to meet the unique needs and preference­s of each individual and to provide the best opportunit­ies for success in the community.”

The agency said it welcomed the monitor’s “reflection­s and recommenda­tions.”

The Justice Department began investigat­ing Georgia’s psychiatri­c hospitals in 2007 after a Journal-Constituti­on series, “A Hidden Shame,” exposed a pattern of poor medical care, abuse, neglect and bad management that had caused dozens of unnecessar­y deaths.

Transformi­ng a historical­ly troubled mental health system has been a slower process than perhaps anyone envisioned when state and federal authoritie­s put together a plan. Already, a judge extended the deadline for compliance once, from 2015 to 2018.

The state has spent millions of dollars and reorganize­d the bureaucrac­y that oversees the hospitals and community treatment. It also closed two state hospitals, in Rome and Thomasvill­e. All that’s left of Central State Hospital, the notorious facility in Milledgevi­lle that once warehoused as many as 12,000 people, is a unit for people committed through the criminal justice system.

Georgia, under pressure from the federal government, pledged seven years ago to radically overhaul the system.

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