Los Angeles Times

No room for the mentally ill

As board and care homes close, officials are seeking money from Sacramento.

- By Doug Smith

Alarmed by the shuttering of dozens of board and care homes that serve lowincome people with debilitati­ng mental illness, Los Angeles officials are stepping up their lobbying efforts to secure more funding in next year’s state budget.

Peter Lynn, executive director of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, appealed to Gov. Gavin Newsom directly in a letter sent on Monday.

Residents are literally “dying on our streets for want of state action to support this critical infrastruc­ture,” he wrote.

Lynn’s letter cited an article in The Times detailing the financial stress on board and care homes from a stateregul­ated funding system that limits their income to $35 per day for each client. The licensed homes provide 24-hour staffing, three meals a day, housekeepi­ng services and medication management.

A study by the state Community Care Licensing Division found that 39 board and care homes closed in Los Angeles County in the three

years ending in April, for a loss of 949 beds. Lynn said an additional 1,000 beds could be lost in the coming years without a boost in the state reimbursem­ent rate.

“These facilities are often the only bulwark between a life of dignity and support, and homelessne­ss for the most vulnerable Angelenos,” Lynn wrote.

He urged the governor to “work with the County of Los Angeles, and all the County health agencies statewide, to create a funding environmen­t that supports the long-term health and increase of this vital resource.”

Newsom’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Lynn’s letter follows a motion approved this month by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s that directed county staff to identify opportunit­ies at the state level to improve funding for the homes.

“The state needs to start reimbursin­g these facilities for the actual cost of the care they provide,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn, who was co-author of the motion.

The supervisor­s also instructed the county department­s of health and mental health and the chief executive officer to identify county funding and engage philanthro­pic organizati­ons to “preserve and expand the number of beds serving lowincome individual­s.”

The “motion lays out first steps for reversing this trend and ensuring that we have an adequate supply of beds for those who need them,” said Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, a co-author.

The motion, responding to a consultant’s report on the financial hardships and temptation­s of a tight realestate market that have caused board and care homes to close, also proposes establishi­ng a capital fund to help facilities catch up with maintenanc­e that they have been unable to afford.

The county agencies are scheduled to report on their progress in December.

The city of Los Angeles also may throw its lobbying weight into the effort.

Citing The Times article, City Councilwom­an Nury Martinez introduced a motion to have the city’s 20192020 state legislativ­e program include “legislatio­n or administra­tive action which would increase the state payment rate for licensed board and care facilities which serve vulnerable communitie­s, especially seniors with mental health issues.”

The motion will be heard early next year in committee at City Hall.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? SAM BLAKE makes a bed at the Blake Home, which he runs with his mother and sister, in Sylmar. L.A. County lost nearly 1,000 such beds in a three-year span.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times SAM BLAKE makes a bed at the Blake Home, which he runs with his mother and sister, in Sylmar. L.A. County lost nearly 1,000 such beds in a three-year span.

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