The Bakersfield Californian

Gov. Newsom’s mental health court proposal advances amid worries

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SAN FRANCISCO — A controvers­ial proposal by Gov. Gavin Newsom to prod more homeless people into mental health treatment is making its way through the Legislatur­e, despite deep misgivings from lawmakers struggling to address a problem that reaches every corner of the state.

Legislator­s are worried that there isn’t enough guaranteed staffing or housing for the program to succeed while forcing vulnerable individual­s into court-ordered services against their will. Even so, the bill unanimousl­y cleared the Senate last month, and passed out of the Assembly judiciary committee Tuesday, one of several stops before being voted on by the full chamber.

But the proposal also received its first no vote and members frustrated by the status quo emphasized how critical that all pieces — housing, services, trained staff, heartfelt support — be in place for the program to work.

“I know that we all agree that the current system is broken and failing. You can walk outside of this building and go a few blocks ... and see those failures every single day,” said Assemblyme­mber Matt Haney, a Democrat who lives in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district, where open drug use and homeless people experienci­ng severe mental health breakdowns are common sights.

“We are in desperate need of a paradigm shift,” he said at Tuesday’s judiciary hearing.

Newsom, a Democrat and former mayor of San Francisco, has made homelessne­ss a priority of his administra­tion, dedicating billions of dollars to convert motels into housing and pitching in to clear encampment­s. He proposed spending $2 billion this year to create more treatment beds and in March, he proposed setting up special mental health courts in every county to link services to homeless individual­s with psychotic disorders.

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