The Phoenix

Phillip’s Law proposed to get children in Pa. the help they need

- By State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta

In a Pennsylvan­ia where our children have the mental health resources they need, Phillip Spruill Jr. would be entering sixth grade this school year.

In that Pennsylvan­ia, Phillip’s laughter would mingle in the hallways of Benjamin B. Comegys School with that of his classmates, as a new academic year flush with possibilit­ies begins.

In that Pennsylvan­ia, Phillip would feel supported, he would have the proper guidance to work through the bullying that many children his age endure, and maybe the bullying would be lessened, because other children in his public school would have the resources they need, too.

In a Pennsylvan­ia where children have the mental health resources they need, Phillip’s parents, Phillip Sr. and Lindarise Spruill, would get to see their oldest child celebrate his 12th birthday this January, and many, many more birthdays after that one.

In a Pennsylvan­ia where our children have the mental health resources they need, Phillip Spruill Jr. would still be alive.

But we don’t live in a Pennsylvan­ia where our children have the mental health resources they need.

Not yet. That Pennsylvan­ia — one where children have access to the help they need — is the one I want to build. Phillip’s Law will help us do it. I introduced Phillip’s Law, which has bipartisan support, after 11-year-old Phillip Spruill Jr. died by suicide on April 5 of this year. Phillip had been bullied by his classmates because of his weight.

Phillip was unable to connect with a mental health profession­al at school on April 5. He went home after school that day and took his own life.

He was found by one of his younger brothers that night.

Phillip didn’t have the resources he needed to cope. He was a student in a district with 323 counselors for 131,302 public school students, or one counselor for every 407 students. The American School Counselor Associatio­n recommends one counselor for every 250 students.

Devastatin­gly, Phillip’s story is not unique.

According to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, suicide is the second leading cause of death for young people between the ages of 10 to 24 nationwide.

In August, Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, whose office oversees the Safe2Say program, released a report indicating that most of the more than 23,000 calls made to the tip line in its first six months were from children reporting bullying, selfharm, suicide ideation and depression and anxiety, and not school threats.

My legislatio­n, Phillip’s Law, would require the Department of Education to investigat­e and report on the number of mental health profession­als in schools in order to make recommenda­tions on how to increase the number of school mental health profession­als to meet nationally accepted ratios.

Unfortunat­ely for Phillip Spruill Jr., his family and all who loved him, there was no one available to listen to him on April 5, to hear the anguish that pushed him to take his own life.

The reality that Phillip’s family has lived with every day since his death does not need to be repeated by any other family in Pennsylvan­ia.

We must ask ourselves, what kind of Pennsylvan­ia do we want to live in? One where our children are heard and helped with the mental health resources they need? Or one where they are ignored?

The first step to giving our students those necessary mental health resources is to enact Phillip’s Law so we can gather the data needed to explore how we increase the number of mental health profession­als in schools and start saving lives.

As students head back to school this year, the time for Phillip’s Law to be enacted is now.

State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta is a Democrat who represents the 181st Legislativ­e District in Philadelph­ia.

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