Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nonprofit to use grant for pre-arrest diversion program

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER

With a giant, $350,000 check now in hand, Volunteer Behavioral Health of Chattanoog­a is ready to begin building its pre-arrest diversion program to keep clients with mental illness out of jail.

The money was awarded Friday by the leadership of the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, which doled out $15 million in nonrecurri­ng funds across the state.

Volunteer Behavioral Health will use its share to renovate its facility on the North Shore and add around a dozen new staff

members. The hope is that law officers will be able to bring people who need mental health treatment there rather than to a jail cell.

“We’re just going to give you that safe place to sit here,

calm down — let’s figure out what’s really going on,” said Dawn Carlton, vice president of fiscal services for Volunteer Behavioral Health.

“Let’s get over that initial hump and then we’ll sit down and talk with you about what’s going on and what we need to do tomorrow to get you hooked up with the right services,” Carlton said.

On the list of coming renovation­s is an observatio­n area that will be open 24/7 to walk-ins who need somewhere to go and receive support while in mental crises. Employees will work with them over a 23-hour period to tailor assistance moving forward.

“That’ll be a quiet place that people can come, be safe, be monitored, see the medical provider, if that’s what’s called for, and hopefully link up with a care manager,” Carlton said.

Those to be hired include a care coordinato­r who will guide services, a nurse practition­er to write prescripti­ons and several technician­s to work oneon-one with clients.

Public officials and members of law enforcemen­t cheered the award to Volunteer Behavioral Health and voiced their full support for the nonprofit organizati­on’s efforts.

Chattanoog­a police Chief David Roddy said police officers have had limited options for handling people with mental health issues, and it can be frustratin­g to see so little change in the trajectori­es of those individual­s’ lives.

“To have an option that now the officers will be able to actually be a participan­t in — they will be that individual that helps them begin the process to change the direction of where they are headed and put them in a new direction — is a huge thing for a police officer,” he said.

“It means a lot to everybody here from the Chattanoog­a Police Department to have another option on dealing with the members of our community that need the most help.”

General Sessions Court Judge Lila Statom said she shares a similar perspectiv­e from her seat on the bench.

“I do appreciate this so much, because so oftentimes our hands were just tied and you have family members calling you, writing you letters, ‘please do something,’ and there were no options available,” she said.

Administra­tors at Volunteer Behavioral Health expect to offer the new services to several hundred people over the next year, in addition to the huge number of people who use the existing walk-in clinic and other programs.

“We have about 200 people come through that walk-in center every month, so I expect that number is going to jump and that’s fine,” said Kandy Templeton, senior vice president of clinical services for the organizati­on.

“We serve a very vulnerable population, but the folks who come through that door downstairs are probably some of the most vulnerable. They’re in crisis, they’re hurting and they need our help.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Marie Williams, center, commission­er of the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, delivers a $350,000 grant to Chris Wyre, left, president and CEO of Volunteer Behavioral Health Friday at the Johnson Mental Health Center in Chattanoog­a. The monies are directed for a pre-arrest diversion program for Hamilton County. Matt Yancey, assistant to the commission­er, stands, at right.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Marie Williams, center, commission­er of the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, delivers a $350,000 grant to Chris Wyre, left, president and CEO of Volunteer Behavioral Health Friday at the Johnson Mental Health Center in Chattanoog­a. The monies are directed for a pre-arrest diversion program for Hamilton County. Matt Yancey, assistant to the commission­er, stands, at right.

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