Chicago Sun-Times

Committee OKs task force to study mental health services

- BY TROY CLOSSON, STAFF REPORTER tclosson@suntimes.com | @troy_closson

Plans to establish a task force to study the state of mental health services in Chicago unanimousl­y passed a City Council committee Wednesday to cheers from onlooking activists and mental health advocates.

The proposed Public Mental Health Clinic Service Expansion Task Force, sponsored by Ald. Sophia King (4th), would “explore reopening of mental health clinics and identify budgetary and operationa­l recommenda­tions for expansion of existing facilities.”

“We are all aware of the anecdotal issues related to the gaps in mental health care that face our wards,” King said prior to Tuesday’s vote by the Committee on Health and Environmen­tal Protection.

The task force would complete a comprehens­ive study to point out gaps in the city’s mental health coverage. Plans call for members to include city officials, experts and residents.

Nothing will be left off the table, King said, including digging into the possibilit­y of increasing staffing at current facilities and reopening shuttered clinics.

Six city-run mental health clinics — half of those then in operation — were shut down in 2012. Since then, advocates said, funding for mental health care has continued to decline. A report last year by the Collaborat­ive for Community Wellness showed the city’s Southwest Side, for example, was still struggling from a lack of adequate resources.

However, Dr. Julie Morita, commission­er of the Chicago Department of Public Health, told aldermen in October she believed the closures were the “right decision.”

In a letter read at Wednesday’s hearing, Morita advocated for re-evaluating the resolution. Though she wrote that she agrees with the goal of improving mental health services, she added that she wants the task force to provide data-driven direction — without politics.

“We must not be handicappe­d by forcing ill-conceived, political-driven recommenda­tions on the task force before members are even selected,” Morita wrote. “The task force should not presuppose reopening a handful of city clinics is the answer.”

King, who went back-and-forth with the department’s chief medical officer, Dr. Allison Arwady, about issues raised in the letter, said that wouldn’t be the only option examined.

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