The Oklahoman

Mullin urges renewal of mental health program funding

- By Anna Bauman and Abby Bitterman Gaylord News

WASHINGTON — U.S. House Rep. Markwayne Mullin, R-Westville, on Thursday introduced a bipartisan bill alongside House and Senate members to expand a national mental health treatment program for which funding runs out March 31.

“We can't afford to let that happen,” he said.

Oklahoma is one of eight states to participat­e in the pilot program, which establishe­d a Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic in Pryor, through the 2014 Excellence in Mental Health and Addiction Treatment Act.

James Willyard, assistant police chief of the Pryor Police Department, said his department was “overwhelme­d” by the mental health crisis before the Pryor clinic was establishe­d. Pryor is 45 miles northeast of Tulsa.

Before the program, officers spent up to several days waiting in emergency rooms with people experienci­ng a mental crisis and traveled up to an hour to the nearest treatment center, Willyard said. Now, it takes about 30 minutes for law enforcemen­t to handle such cases.

It has “changed the world for us,” he said.

The proposed legislatio­n would extend funding for the Oklahoma location for two years and create similar treatment centers in 11 additional states.

U.S. Sens. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., Roy Blunt, R-Mo., and Rep. Doris Matsui, D-Calif., stood with Mullin in backing the legislatio­n.

“When we start talking about health care, there couldn't be a bigger divide between Republican­s and Democrats,” Mullin said. “So when we come together, it should get everybody's attention.”

If funding for the behavioral health clinics is not extended, more than 3,000 staff could be laid off, more than 9,000 patients could lose their medication­assisted treatment and 77 percent of the clinics would have to re-establish waiting lists, according to informatio­n distribute­d by the staffs.

The pilot clinics provide continuous, year-round crisis services, outpatient mental health and substance abuse treatment services, immediate screenings and care coordinate­d through partnershi­ps with emergency rooms, law enforcemen­t and veterans groups.

It's a model that works, experts say. The community clinics allow people to get treatment faster and closer to where they live, cuts down on incarcerat­ion rates and reduces the manpower required of law enforcemen­t to handle the crisis.

“The data is in,” said Laura Heebner, executive vice president of the Compass Health Network. “The Excellence Act demonstrat­ion is a success.”

Mullin said he spoke with Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt about finding a statelevel funding solution to bridge the gap before the program receives funding through the federal legislatio­n, should it pass. But for now, the program's future remains uncertain.

The possibilit­y of the clinic's losing funding could, among other things, mean strained resources for a police department that Willyard said is busier than ever — “a scary thought,” he said.

“The opioid epidemic has hit all of us — it's hit close to home, it's hit immediatel­y in my house,” Mullin said. “And it's something that we should take very personally.”

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