Los Angeles Times

Don’t expect a mental health fix

- Les Brockmann Granada Hills

Re “If people reject care, then what?” Opinion, Aug. 20

Jonathan Sherin and Darrell Steinberg seem to call for a committee and new semantics rather than address the hard facts of homeless people who cannot or will not care for themselves.

Fifty years ago, when there was plenty of money, then-Gov. Jerry Brown chose not to remediate his immediate predecesso­r Ronald Reagan’s decision not to fund community mental health. There are no cheery solutions for profoundly mentally ill people, although medicine and therapy can help.

Can the financiall­y strapped state somehow fund community mental health care? Does the public even want it where they live?

Since our society in California is non-utopian in every other way, it is unreasonab­le to expect some sweet solution on mental health care for homeless people that is reached by committee.

William Josephs

Los Angeles The writer is a clinical psychologi­st.

Some weeks ago, when driving in the San Fernando Valley, I saw a homeless woman just standing in the blazing heat. I had a nice, unopened bottle of cold water with me, so I pulled up next to her and offered it to her.

She absolutely ignored me. Who knows what storms were going on in her head?

After shouting from my car for a while, I finally gave up and drove away. Then I called 911, and the dispatcher seemed almost uninterest­ed, saying, “If they don’t want help there’s not much we can do about it.”

I didn’t know what else to do. What can be done? Can anybody rescue a person like this? She might be dead by now.

I would love to hear from the op-ed article authors or local providers — anyone who can provide a good answer to this. It’s sad to see people dying on the streets around us without being able to do a thing.

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